# UI III - Ex 3 - Accessibility (website) **Instructions:** Choose a website you find particularly accessible. Find at least 3 concrete examples of accessible measures and explain how they ease the reading or perception of visual content. **Deliverables:** - A 3-page PDF document extracted from a Figma file with 3 different elements from a website (it can be from 3 different websites) that are accessible. The three measures must be different. **Resources:** - [What accessibility is and why it’s so important](https://uxdesign.cc/what-accessibility-is-and-why-its-so-important-9c56e033ff26) - [Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG)](https://www.w3.org/WAI/standards-guidelines/wcag/) - [Accessibility testing — W3C Wik](https://www.w3.org/wiki/Accessibility_testing)i - [UX Myth: Accessibility is expensive and difficult](https://uxmyths.com/post/654091803/myth-5-accessibility-is-expensive-and-difficult) - [Salesforce UX - 7 tips every designer needs to know about accessibility](https://medium.com/salesforce-ux/7-things-every-designer-needs-to-know-about-accessibility-64f105f0881b) - [Why prioritze web accessibility](https://blog.hubspot.com/service/why-prioritize-web-accessibility) **Criteria:** - Examples of measures - Color contrast - Highlighted or enlarged text when hovering - Links color that is different from the body text's - Breadcrumbs to indicate where you are in terms of navigation - In forms, the title of the case should be above the text zone - Error states - etc.