Accessibility
Built to be legible.
We want every visitor — including those who browse with a keyboard, a screen reader, or magnification — to read our work without friction. This page records where we stand and how to tell us when we fall short.
The standard we hold
We target WCAG 2.1 Level AA — the conformance standard U.S. courts and the Department of Justice generally use to interpret the ADA for websites. We treat it as a bar to design and review against, not a one-time certification.
What we've done
- Semantic structure — landmark regions, a single ordered heading outline, and real lists, so assistive technology can navigate the page predictably.
- Full keyboard operation — a skip link, a logical focus order, and a visible focus ring on every interactive element.
- Color contrast measured against AA — body text, mono captions, and the cobalt accent all meet or exceed the required ratios.
- Reduced-motion support — all entrance and scroll animation is disabled for visitors whose system requests it; the page then renders complete and static.
- Text alternatives — decorative ornaments are hidden from assistive technology, and functional controls carry accessible names.
- Resilience — the site renders fully with JavaScript disabled; no content is hidden behind script.
Known limitations
We'd rather name the edges we're still working on than pretend they don't exist:
- Our contact flow opens your email client. If you don't have one configured, write to us directly at hello@brilliantage.com.
- Typefaces load from Google Fonts. If that request is blocked, the page falls back to system fonts and stays fully readable.
- We have not yet completed a formal third-party audit with assistive-technology users. It is on the roadmap.
Found a barrier?
Tell us. Email hello@brilliantage.com with the page and what got in your way. We reply to every message within two business days — and fix what we can.