If the article has an individual author, type their last name first, followed by a comma, then their first name. Some online articles have a group or organizational author. Type this name exactly as it appears on the website. Place a period after the author's name.  Individual author example: Nunley, Kathie. Organizational author example: United Nations Platform for Action Committee. Following the name of the author, type the title of the article using title-case. Capitalize nouns, pronouns, verbs, and adverbs. Place a period at the end of the title, inside the closing quotation marks.  Individual author example: Nunley, Kathie. "The Caffeine Craze." Organizational author example: United Nations Platform for Action Committee. "Globalization and Clothes." After the name of the article, provide the name of the website or the organization that publishes the website. Use title-case, capitalizing all nouns, pronouns, verbs, and adverbs. Place a period at the end of the name.  Individual author example: Nunley, Kathie. "The Caffeine Craze." Layered Curriculum. Organizational author example: United Nations Platform for Action Committee. "Globalization and Clothes." Women and the Economy. If there is a date of publication for the article, use the most recent date listed. If the article was modified, include the phrase "last modified" before the date. If there is no publication date, use the date you accessed the article after the word "accessed." Use month-day-year format for the date, and place a period at the end.  Individual author example: Nunley, Kathie. "The Caffeine Craze." Layered Curriculum. Accessed July 28, 2018. Organizational author example: United Nations Platform for Action Committee. "Globalization and Clothes." Women and the Economy. Last modified March 2011. Close your citation with a full direct URL or permalink for the article. If there is no direct URL, use the URL of the home page of the website. Place a period at the end of the URL to end your citation.  Individual author example: Nunley, Kathie. "The Caffeine Craze." Layered Curriculum. Accessed July 28, 2018. http://help4teachers.com/caffeine.htm. Organizational author example: United Nations Platform for Action Committee. "Globalization and Clothes." Women and the Economy. Last modified March 2011. http://unpac.ca/economy/g_clothes.html. In Chicago-style footnotes, include the same information you included in your bibliography. There are some differences from the bibliography entry, however. Parts of the citation are separated with commas in footnotes, instead of periods. The names of individual authors are listed in first name-last name format.  Individual author example: Kathie Nunley, "The Caffeine Craze," Layered Curriculum, accessed July 28, 2018, http://help4teachers.com/caffeine.htm. Organizational author example: United Nations Platform for Action Committee, "Globalization and Clothes," Women and the Economy, last modified March 2011, http://unpac.ca/economy/g_clothes.html.

Summary:
Begin your citation with the author's name. Provide the title of the article in quotation marks. Include the name of the website or publisher in italics. Note the date you accessed the article, or the date it was published. Copy the full URL of the article. Alter the punctuation for footnotes in text.