Our commitment
ONME BALI is committed to making onmebali.com accessible to as many people as possible, in line with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 level AA and the upcoming European Accessibility Act (in force June 2025). We treat accessibility as part of good craftsmanship, not a checkbox.
What we have done
- Semantic, keyboard-navigable HTML across all pages
- Visible focus rings on every interactive element
- Sufficient colour contrast (text and interactive elements meet WCAG AA 4.5:1)
- Alternative text on product and editorial imagery; decorative images are explicitly marked
- Forms with associated labels and clear error messages
- Cart and checkout that work without JavaScript-only patterns
- Responsive layout that scales from 320px up, with text zoom up to 200% without breaking
- Respect for the operating system's "reduce motion" preference on animated sections
- Skip-to-content available on the keyboard tab order
Known limitations
We are honest about what we are still working on:
- Some older editorial photos in the Journal do not yet have detailed alt text — we are rewriting them piece by piece.
- The currency converter shows live rates but uses Latin numerals only.
- The Instagram preview in the footer is decorative and may not be perceived by all screen readers; the link remains fully accessible.
- Third-party embeds (WhatsApp, Google Maps, reCAPTCHA) follow their providers' accessibility standards, which we cannot directly control.
Assistive technology we test with
- VoiceOver on macOS and iOS
- NVDA on Windows
- TalkBack on Android
- Keyboard-only navigation on all major browsers
Tell us if something breaks
If you find a page or feature that is hard to use, please write to care@onmebali.com. Tell us which page, which device, and what happened — we will acknowledge within two working days and fix it as quickly as we can.
Alternatives
If you would rather not use the site at all, the same team is reachable by phone (+62 822 3648 2551) and WhatsApp during studio hours. We can read out the catalogue, take measurements, and arrange shipping by voice if that works better for you.
“Accessibility, like tailoring, is never finished — it is improved on every garment.”
