In order to ensure our clients’ digital presences meet accessibility standards, we offer an array of resources and services, including:

  • Guided Accessibility Audit

  • Accessibility Remediation Training

  • Digital Accessibility Training

Contact us today to discuss which services may be right for your business.

Curb Cut Verified Sites

The following companies’ websites and digital assets have successfully passed rigorous assessments by the Digital Accessibility team at More Canvas. Manual and automated techniques were employed to evaluate the compliance of the digital materials with international guidelines.

Fortis Wealth Management

The homepage of Fortis Wealth Management, a fiduciary independent financial advisor. It shows the company's title over a black and white image of a marble ceiling with marble columns.

IVA Voice and Music Studio

The homepage of IVA Voice and Music Studio. It shows the silhouette of a young singer with dreads in a recording studio lit with pink and purple lights.

Friends of Herrontown Woods

The Friends of Herrontown Woods homepage shows people walking in hiking gear through a green, wooded area with a stream in the background.

Hortihop

The Hortihop home page prominently features a photo of an apartment beautifully dressed with plants, with the text "You can be the friend with all the thriving plants" hovering over it.

Canopy Strategies

The title "Canopy Strategies" appears over a bird's eye view of a canopy of trees. The subtitle is "See your business from above the canopy."

Adorn Aesthetics

The words "Adorn Aesthetics" appear in gentle fonts with a laurel making up half of the "O" in Adorn. In the background, wheat stalks are faintly visible in a dusky golden fog.

The Moving Frame

A site displays the title "The Moving Frame" against a colorful, abstract background

Melissa Rider Carson

A site with a headshot of its subject, Melissa Rider Carson, and a bio that begins with "I believe that we can all live the lives we dream of."

Why “Curb Cut?”

The Curb Cut Effect is a phenomenon in which accommodations provided to a marginalized group become preferred by many.

The name recalls what was observed when curbs were cut in order to allow those in wheelchairs to cross streets independently; these new sloped curbs were far easier to use by people walking, biking, and pushing strollers.

A core service we provide at More Canvas is the careful assessment of the accessibility of digital experiences, challenging the notion that accommodating the needs of the few is a burden to the many. Only in understanding the needs of those with impairments can we build the best digital spaces for us all.

At More Canvas, we believe that the curb cut effect is just as present in the digital space as it is in the built environment. The process of determining what obstacles may be preventing the inclusion of those with disabilities not only ensures inclusion but also leads to designs that work better for everyone.

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