Headings for Designers
Designers can help developers build more accessible websites by separating visual heading styles from content hierarchy with a naming convention that communicates intent.
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Designers can help developers build more accessible websites by separating visual heading styles from content hierarchy with a naming convention that communicates intent.
Developers can create accessible and maintainable websites by separating style from structure when implementing heading systems.
Now that web components have gained more traction over the last few years (used by companies like Salesforce, Github, and Adobe), we should explore how web components can offer progressive enhancement to applications without the bloat of JavaScript frameworks.
We’ve evaluated automated accessibility testing tools to help you determine which is best for your project. Learn the strengths and weaknesses of the Silktide Accessibility Checker browser extension.
When building an MVP, how do you balance speed and iteration with making sure that the product meets accessibility guidelines? It’s tempting to save accessibility for later, but it’s much easier to avoid mistakes and costly retrofitting by considering accessibility from the very beginning. Dustin shares some strategies for making sure your MVP is built accessibly without slowing down your project.
Accessibility efforts apply to all sorts of applications, even those we build for TV. Dustin shares the ways we implemented web accessibility within a client’s Roku app.
Understanding and implementing the Web Accessibility Content Guidelines (WCAG) can be difficult for even trained experts. Catherine helps us with WCAG 2.2′s newest guideline by explaining the requirements and providing examples of how to improve our user interfaces.
We’ve evaluated automated accessibility testing tools to help you determine which is best for your project. Learn the strengths and weaknesses of the IBM Equal Access browser extension.
Sparkbox developer Josh Winn shares some great ideas about developing support for Windows High Contrast and forced colors mode.
What’s next for Sparkbox and its clients? Nobody has a crystal ball, but we have some ideas about what’s coming. We asked our team to weigh in on trends in technology that will impact how we work in 2024.

Katie Jennings
Vice President of Business Development