Liz McCready's blog and portfolio site. Ginger Kiwi Exploring Software Development, Accessibility, AI Engineering, and Design
In a new short series of posts, we highlight some of the useful tools and techniques for developers and designers. Recently we’ve covered CSS Auditing Tools and CSS Generators, and this time we look into reliable accessible components: from tabs and tables to toggles and tooltips. We sincerely hope that these tools and techniques will prove to be useful in your day-to-day work — and most importantly help you avoid some time-consuming, routine tasks.
Liz McCready's blog and portfolio site. Ginger Kiwi Exploring Software Development, Accessibility, AI Engineering, and Design
<p>Not all ‘accessible components’ are created equal. Find out which will work best for our end users with this checklist.</p>
Liz McCready's blog and portfolio site. Ginger Kiwi Exploring Software Development, Accessibility, AI Engineering, and Design
foobartel Ltd. - Web Design & Development
A big list of resources, articles, blog posts, and checklists to help you, designers, get started on your “building more accessible products” journey.
To improve accessibility of the web as it is today, I feel we dearly need accessibility guidance that is holistic, well tested and easy to use.
Accessibility is a critical skill for developers doing work at any point in the stack. For front-end tasks, modern CSS provides capabilities we can leverage to make layouts more accessibly inclusive for users of all abilities across any device.
A guide on how to consider accessibility from the early steps of a project
Recently, my colleagues asked me to create a small checklist for making an accessible component from scratch. Here it is.