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How to Convince People to Care and Invest in Accessibility by Stéphanie Walter - UX Researcher & Designer.
How to Convince People to Care and Invest in Accessibility by Stéphanie Walter - UX Researcher & Designer.
By @stephaniewalter@front-end.social
This talk, article, is for anyone who’s ever said “we need to make this accessible,” and got ignored, brushed off, or told, “We’ll do that later.” If you’re not in a leadership role, if you’re not officially “the accessibility person,” but you still want to drive change, this is for you.
·stephaniewalter.design·
How to Convince People to Care and Invest in Accessibility by Stéphanie Walter - UX Researcher & Designer.
Why I Like Designing in the Browser
Why I Like Designing in the Browser
I love this post by @tylersticka@social.lol. Designing in the browser also allows you to design from the actual real content up instead of structure down. It’s an important skill to have.
Many standards, especially in the last decade, don’t just streamline implementation: They open up whole new creative possibilities! CSS grid and subgrid, high-gamut color, container queries, scroll-driven animations, view transitions, color schemes and more!
Some of these ideas make it into design tools, but the wait can be long… understandably so, making interfaces for this stuff is hard! By the time Figma introduced their flexbox equivalent, the more powerful CSS Grid was already years into baseline availability.
Most HTML elements want to Elasti-Girl their way through any viewport size.
And can we talk about the awesomeness that is dev tools? In any modern browser, developers (or curious nerds of any discipline) can inspect every size, color and property of every single element of the page without any additional effort from the designer. Super-powered design specs, absolutely free.
·cloudfour.com·
Why I Like Designing in the Browser