Accessibility
Accessibility at Stonekept
Last updated: 2026-06-20
Stonekept is a memory keeper for everyone, and that has to include people who use screen readers, keyboards, magnification, or reduced motion. We are building toward WCAG 2.2 Level AA across this website. This is honest, ongoing work, not a finished box we have ticked, and we would rather tell you where we are than claim more than we have done.
What works today
- Keyboard: every link, button, form field, menu, and tab is reachable and operable with the keyboard alone, with a clear amber focus ring so you always know where you are. A "Skip to content" link is the first stop on every page.
- Screen readers: each page has a single, logical heading outline and proper landmarks (header, navigation, main, footer). Product mockups of the app are exposed as a single described image rather than a confusing pile of fake interface text.
- Forms: every input has a real label, errors are announced, and nothing relies on placeholder text alone.
- Motion: if you ask your system to reduce motion, we honour it. Parallax, looping animations, and the particle background all stop.
- Contrast & zoom: body text meets the AA contrast ratio on our dark theme, and the page reflows and stays readable when you zoom in.
What we're still working on
- Hands-on testing across the full range of screen readers (JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver) and braille displays is ongoing, not complete.
- Some animated product demonstrations are summarised by a short description rather than narrated step by step. We are looking at richer text alternatives that stay simple.
- Accessibility of the iOS, macOS, watchOS, and Windows apps is a separate effort with its own roadmap, tracked apart from this site.
- Background video is decorative and has no spoken content, so there are no captions; tell us if that ever feels like missing context.
Tell us what's broken
If something gets in your way, or you have an idea that would make Stonekept easier to use, we want to hear it. Send us a message through our contact form. It helps if you can mention the page, the device or assistive technology you were using, and what you expected to happen. We read every message and will keep this page updated as we close gaps.