- From: Miriam Fukushima <fukushima@glamus.de>
- Date: Tue, 18 Apr 2023 14:12:35 +0200
- To: Milan Regec <milan.regec@hey.com>, webaim-forum@list.webaim.org, IG - WAI Interest Group List list <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <3d523cf8-74d6-11d9-7fb1-0dbcec0caa20@glamus.de>
Hi Milan, thank you so much for your answer! So do I understand ist correctly that MS Word only changes black text to white and white background to black and none of the other color or formatting settings? Regards Miriam On 18/04/2023 13:22, Milan Regec wrote: > Hey, Miriam, > > to have document compatible with "dark-mode" I would stay away from > playing with backgrounds and text colors in Word to cater to the > dark-mode specifically (though you definitely can use colors when > creating your document). Also, outlining text is IMHO the worst > approach of all. > > Adobe Acrobat has simple accessibility setting allowing replacing > document colors - the default setting is white text on black > background, but user can tweak this according to his needs. > > It indeed does not change the color of graphical elements, however you > can mitigate almost all of the problems with this: > > * use background colors for any elements that have text over them > that provide sufficient contrast in both cases - if the text is > black or white > * as much as possible use vector graphics elements, Adobe can change > color of these according to your accessibility preferences (the > checkbox is labeled "Change the color of line art as well as text") > > > While researching the answer I also stumbled upon the fact, that Adobe > Color has recently released Accessibility Tools > <https://color.adobe.com/create/color-accessibility> in their website, > allowing the creation of "color-blind" safe color-pallets with ease in > a tool that designers are familiar with. > > Hope it helped, > > Milan > > > On April 18, 2023, Miriam Fukushima <fukushima@glamus.de> wrote: > > Hello everyone, > > I was wondering if there are any ressources on how to create > documents in MS Word or and also export them as PDFs so that when > users have dark mode enabled, the documents and PDFs are still > easily readable. > > As far as I understand, MS Word just switches background color > and Text, so you should use the MS Word formatting tools to make > sure MS Word /can/ change the colors. > But are there any guidelines on what to do or not to do when > creating documents or which settings to set? > Or are there any ressources on what is changed into what or by > which criteria? > > What about text on graphical background? A lot of company designs > have their own backgrounds, headers and footers. > If I have text in front of a more complex background, then that is > probably not changed but the text will be, so it becomes very > likely unreadable. > But if I integrate the text into the graphic, to make sure it > stays readable, then it's not accessible as text anymore. > Or is it a solution to outline text? But I could imagine some > customers being highly opposed to that look. > > Are there any settings to set when exporting to PDF or any > guidelines or best practices on how to create PDFs for light and > dark mode? > > If not, do you have any experiences with this topic and found best > practices for yourself? > > Thank you so much for the help! > > Kind regards, Miriam > > > > > -- > Sent with HEY <https://hey.com/sent> -- Mit freundlichen Grüßen Miriam Fukushima - Entwicklung / Barrierefreiheit - - Development / Accessibility - --------------------------------------------------- GLAMUS Gesellschaft für moderne Kommunikation mbH Gartenstr. 24, 53229 Bonn http://www.glamus.de/ mailto:fukushima@glamus.de Tel: +49 228 97617-75 Fax: +49 228 97617-55 HRB: Bonn 6287 Geschäftsführer: Ulrich Santo - Gerhard Loosch ---------------------------------------------------
Received on Tuesday, 18 April 2023 12:12:51 UTC