11676 shaares
402 private links
402 private links
The same content can create clarity for one person and confusion, stress, or exclusion for another, without changing a single word.
Accessibility is a must. Here are some examples
- When color disappears completely
- Buttons that look clickable even without color
- Links that are underlined or styled consistently
- Hierarchy created through spacing, borders, size, and structure
- When nice colors choices stop working
- Contrast that survives more than one type of vision
- Less reliance on subtle color differences
- Clear affordances that don’t depend on perfect perception
- The most color blindness is ignored
- Meaning that survives without red or green
- Icons, labels, or position reinforcing importance
- Safer decisions and faster understanding
- When text becomes slightly blurry
- Text that stays readable when slightly blurred
- Comfortable line height and spacing
- Zoom that doesn’t punish the layout
- When you can only see a small part of the screen
- Clear headings that anchor the page#
- Logical reading order
- Visible focus states that guide navigation
- When letters won't stay still (dyslexia)
- predictable layouts
- plain, calm language
- no uneccessary visual tricks
- When language stops making sense
- plain language
- clear labels
- information that unfolds gradually, not all at once