Access is part of the art direction.
Affordable targets WCAG 2.2 AA across the marketing site, account, purchase path, and paid product. A passing checklist is the floor; comfortable use is the work.
Built into the system
Shared components are designed with semantic structure, visible focus, generous targets, flexible type, and non-colour cues. Interactive art includes an equivalent name or summary rather than asking a screen reader to admire a circle.
The layouts are designed to support zoom and narrow screens without horizontal reading. Forms aim to keep labels, errors, instructions, and status updates programmatically connected; the full-route audit remains a release check.
Motion and media
Reduced-motion preferences replace continuous movement and scroll choreography with composed static states. The pause control stops decorative activity motion without hiding information.
Product meaning is not placed only inside animation, hover, sound, or an image. Contrast preferences receive a clearer palette; exported material is designed to remain legible.
How we test
Basic interaction checks and representative responsive reviews are evidence so far. A formal cross-browser keyboard pass, screen-reader and assistive-technology review, store restoration, and account-lifecycle sign-off remain release checks rather than completed claims.
Known limitations need an owner and target date. Third-party payment and store surfaces will be included in release testing even though their final interface is controlled by the provider.
Tell us where it catches
Email [email protected] with the page, device, browser or app version, assistive technology if relevant, and what you were trying to do. Share only the detail you are comfortable sharing.
A monitored acknowledgement target and alternative-route procedure will be published when the support rota is operational. Until then, this address is the submission route rather than a response-time promise.