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It's Lifey

Accessibility

Accessibility at It's Lifey

We want this site to feel usable, readable, and respectful for as many people as possible—including visitors who use keyboards, screen readers, or other assistive tools. This page describes what we prioritize today, where we are still learning, and how you can reach us with feedback.

Last updated: April 9, 2026

What we are doing intentionally

  • Semantic structure. Pages use proper headings, landmarks, and lists so navigation and reading order make sense in assistive technologies.
  • Keyboard and focus. Interactive controls (links, buttons, form fields) are built to be reachable by keyboard, and many components include visible focus styles so you can see where you are on the page.
  • Readable typography. We use generous line height and body text sizes that support comfortable reading on phones and desktops.
  • Alt text on key images. Meaningful images include descriptive alternative text where it helps; decorative images are marked accordingly where implemented.

What we are still working on

We have not claimed full third-party certification (for example, a formal WCAG audit report) for every page and every state of the site. Accessibility is ongoing work. Honest gaps and active priorities include:

  • Full-site audit. We continue to review templates, forms, and interactive patterns (including mobile navigation and motion) to find and fix issues we may have missed.
  • Bypassing repeated navigation.A dedicated "skip to main content" control is not on the site today; we may add one as we refine the header and announcement patterns.
  • Third-party tools. Some features (such as spam protection on forms) rely on external services. Their interfaces may not always match our preferred accessibility baseline; we choose providers carefully and report issues when we can.
  • Media. As we add or update video or audio, we aim to provide captions or transcripts where they meaningfully support access—not every legacy clip may be fully captioned yet.
  • Contrast and motion. We design toward strong contrast and calm motion, but we will keep testing edge cases (for example, very small screens or reduced-motion preferences) and adjusting.

Help us improve

If something is hard to use—whether with a screen reader, keyboard only, or for another reason—please tell us. Specific pages, browsers, and a short description of what happened help us reproduce and fix issues faster.

Contact us with the subject line "Accessibility" if you can.

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