Files
ivangdavila_image/accessibility.md

2.6 KiB

Accessibility for Images

Core Rule

  • An image is not finished when it only looks good; it must also be understandable and usable in context.

Alt Text by Role

  • Decorative image: use empty alt text (alt="") so assistive tech can skip it.
  • Informative image: describe the content or takeaway briefly and specifically.
  • Functional image: describe the action or destination, not just the pixels.
  • Complex chart or diagram: alt text alone is not enough; provide nearby summary or structured explanation too.

Alt Text Rules

  • Describe meaning and purpose, not every visible pixel.
  • Do not start with "image of" or "picture of" unless that distinction matters.
  • Keep it concise, but not so short that it loses the point.
  • Captions and surrounding text can reduce what the alt text needs to repeat.
  • If the surrounding copy already says the same thing, avoid redundant alt text.

Text Inside Images

  • If the text is important, it should usually exist in real HTML or nearby copy too.
  • Social images, banners, infographics, and screenshots often hide key meaning in pixels; duplicate the important message elsewhere when the medium allows.
  • Tiny text that is readable in the editor but not in a preview is an accessibility failure even if the export dimensions are technically correct.

Charts, Diagrams, and Data Visuals

  • Alt text should summarize the main takeaway, not list every bar or data point.
  • If precise values matter, provide the values in nearby text or a data table.
  • Colors alone should not carry the only distinction between categories or states.
  • Thin lines, pale labels, and low-contrast legends disappear first when charts are resized.

Contrast and Overlays

  • Text over photos often needs a deliberate overlay, blur, or crop change to stay readable.
  • White text on a bright image and dark text on a muddy background both fail fast in previews.
  • Overlays should improve readability without flattening the image so much that it loses meaning.

Icons and UI Imagery

  • Icon-only controls still need accessible names outside the image itself.
  • If an icon can be misread without a label, assume many users will misread it.
  • Decorative icons do not need verbose alt text if adjacent text already carries the meaning.

Common Accessibility Traps

  • Writing alt text that describes appearance but misses purpose.
  • Repeating the exact caption inside alt text.
  • Using images to carry headings, buttons, or instructions that should be live text.
  • Publishing charts with no summary of the actual insight.
  • Putting critical text near image edges where crops, previews, or zoom reduce legibility.