This article was first posted in 2007 on the eAccess blog, now available courtesy of the Internet Archive. Three years later and I still believe that emotion rich images are important to blind people, particularly those who once had sight (and that's most of us). Results from the third WebAIM screen reader survey suggest I'm not alone, so I'm reposting the article here to encourage the debate to continue.| Tink - Léonie Watson - On technology, food & life in the digital age
I recently got stuck trying to figure out the right alt text for a particular image…| jakearchibald.com
Accessibility resources free online from the international standards organization: W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI).| Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
The srcset and sizes attributes can be used, using the w| html.spec.whatwg.org
Accessibility resources free online from the international standards organization: W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI).| Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
This post contains everything you need to know about alt-texts! When to use them and how to perfectly craft them. By me, Daniel, a web…| Axess Lab
The WebAIM Million| webaim.org
Image placement on the modern web is highly intentional, helping to communicate the overall purpose of a page or view. This means that nearly every image you declare needs to have an alternate description. Nulling an image indicates that it is for decorative purposes only. In this context, decorative means that the image does not visually communicate information that is important to understanding the purpose of the page or view, and why the image is included as a part of that.| Smashing Magazine