1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women are color blind.

So chances are pretty high that many people who use your app have color blindness.

Hereโ€™s a guide on how to make sure they have a good experience ๐Ÿ‘‡

First, understand how color blindness determines what a person sees (and, in turn, how it affects your designs).

There are several different kinds of color blindness, which affect your ability to see red, yellow, and/or blue.

See the chart below for examples.

When you're designing a UI, color can be a great way to enhance information and make things easier to understand.

But if you rely too much on it, those who are color blind will have a difficult time.

Letโ€™s walk through the main ways a designer should account for this:

1) Never use color alone to convey meaning.

For example, if you only use color to show a form validation error, a color blind person will struggle to understand what's happening simply because they can't distinguish the colors.

Instead, include an error message and/or icon.

2) Utilize contrast in addition to different hues.

Contrast isn't an issue for most people who are color blind. Take advantage of that by darkening or lightening your colors and relying on contrast to convey information.

You can also add patterns or shape differences.

3) Run your designs through color blind checkers

There are lots of tools out there for this (most of them free).

It helps quite a bit to run your specific designs through a simulator to test how they will appear to a color blind person.

Here are four of my favorite color blind simulators:

๐Ÿ‘‰ https://www.getstark.co/
๐Ÿ‘‰ https://www.figma.com/community/plugin/733343906244951586/Color-Blind
๐Ÿ‘‰ https://michelf.ca/projects/sim-daltonism/
๐Ÿ‘‰ https://colororacle.org/

Stark: The suite of integrated accessibility tools for your product design and development team

The suite of integrated accessibility tools for your product design and development team โ€ข Making the worldโ€™s products accessible.

Stark
Now let's look at one bad example and three good examples of how companies have addressed color blindness in their products:

Bad example: ATG Tickets is one of the UK's largest ticketing websites.

When picking your seats, they rely entirely on color coding to show you price and availability.

This would be difficult (or impossible) for a color blind person to figure out.

Good example: The iOS app Dots normally uses color to distinguish between dots, but you can also turn on color blind mode to reveal symbols on each dot type.
Good example: Slack has a few preset accessible themes that are even named with the specific type of color blindness they address.
Good example: Trello has a "Colorblind friendly" toggle that adds patterns to labels so they are always distinguishable.

If you remember one thing, make it this:

Always use color to support something your UI is already saying; never use it as the only way to communicate.

I'm building a field guide to color for product designers that will have more guides and tools related to accessibility.

If you're interested in this topic, be sure to check it out:

https://uxtools.co/products/color/

Field Guide to Color

A package of useful resources and tools to help you master color as a product designer.

UX Tools