Accessibility
A site more people can use, comfortably.
When we say “accessibility,” we mean the basics: more readers can find their way around, read the text, use a keyboard where it matters, and not get lost in layout or wording. We care about that, and we treat it as part of doing this project well — not as an extra polish layer at the end.
What we aim for today
- Clear page structure (landmarks like header, main navigation, main content, and footer).
- Interactive pieces (such as the menu) built so keyboard and screen-reader users can open, move through, and close them.
- Readable type and color choices we control, with calm contrast so long reads stay gentle on the eyes.
- Meaningful headings on essays and index pages so you can skim and jump.
We are not perfect
Mindful is small and changes over time. We test in browsers and with automated checks, but we do not catch everything. A combination of device, assistive technology, and personal preference can still surface barriers we have not seen yet. If you hit one, it is real, even if this page says we try hard.
Still improving
We revisit layouts, copy, and behavior as the site grows. When we learn about a problem, we want to fix it or explain honestly if a fix will take longer. Accessibility is ongoing work, not a one-time checkbox.
If something is hard to use
We want to hear about it. When you have a moment, tell us what you were trying to do, what got in the way, and what device or tools you were using if you know them. That detail helps more than you might think.