Accessible websites can look fabulous, be interactive, and use up-to-date multimedia capabilities (e.g., images, sound, movies, Javascript, photographs and server-side technologies like PHP or ASP).

Yes, you can use all the ‘stuff’ that as a designer you deem appropriate to your audience and message, and still have a site that is accessible, and passes ‘Bobby’ (and other accessibility tools) accessibility checks.

However, what is required when using these technologies is a bit of clear thinking about what their purpose is on your site, and how, if the content is important, their functionality or message can be provided in alternative ways.

For example, provide alt attributes and title tags for your images and photographs, ensure that your site still functions if the user browser doesn’t support Javascript, provide captions or transcripts of your movies and sound.

Admittedly it is not all easy, captioning of multimedia for instance is a specialist and difficult skill to master, but most accessibility techniques are not ‘rocket science’ and will actually add to the ‘richness’ of the experience for your visitors, rather than detract from it.

Links

  • CSS Zen Garden: http://www.csszengarden.com/
  • Accessify.com: Attractive accessible Websites; http://accessify.com/features/articles/good-lookers/

Related Content

  • Website Accessibility Auditing Service – for WCAG 2.1, WCAG 2.2 Compliance
    Richard Morton is a member of our website accessibility audit team "A large proportion of my work over the last six years has been web accessibility auditing, using the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.1 & WCAG 2.2).I do manual testing, using the standard browsers, and light tools like the AIS ...
  • About Jim Byrne Accessible Website Design Specialist
    A passion for equality and accessibility Decades before he became an accessible website design specialist, Jim started his working life as a computer programmer in 1979 using 'miniframe' computers that had LP (a long player record) sized 'not very floppy disks'. The disks needed to be screwed into a large cabinet ...
  • Accessibility Auditing – WCAG 2.1 & WCAG 2.2 and Accessible Website Design, UK
    Jim Byrne is an accessibility specialist with three decades of experience in accessible website design, training and accessibility auditing and consultancy for the not-for-profit, education, public and third sector. An award-winning website developer, website accessibility training provider and WCAG 2 expert ( he provided feedback on the development of WCAG ...

Take my Web Accessibility Online Training Course - WCAG 2.1 Compliance

Learn to design and manage WCAG compliant, accessible websites with my online course

You will learn both the techniques of accessible website design and an entire ‘framework for thinking about the subject’. It will equip you with the skills to understand, identify and fix issues any accessibility issues you come across. Watch the free videos to get a taste of what is on the course. Video image from Web Accessibility Online Training Course - WCAG 2.1 Compliance

Working with non-profits, charities, voluntary and public sector organisations and social enterprises for over 20 years. Jim set up one of the worlds first website accessibility web agencies in the mid 1990s.