As someone who has a physical disability and creates content for my disabled community, it's important for me to use alt text. I was challenged at first with figuring out the best way to do it, but as I've done it more, it makes sense and is easier. This video is very important and I'll be sharing with others who might want to learn about Alt Text! Thanks @canva
This video was excellent. I really appreciate all the insights and immediately clicked to see other resources in the description. I feel like it might be a test to see who watched the video? Might want to swap out those emojis that are currently used as bullet points 😅
Thank you Canva big help for me. I used to be a full time designer but now I work in the disability sector where I see that there is a great need for accessible design.
This is heartwarming! One of our goals is to empower the world to design and this just inspired us to work harder. Sending lots of #CanvaLove to you! 💖 ^ss
Thanks for making this. Can you make one (if it hasn't been done already) on how to save a Canva creation as an accessible, tagged PDF file? Can't seem to get the download as PDF to have tags in them. The flatten choice seems to make things worse.
Hey there! Do you mean downloading an editable PDF file? If so, we don't have this yet but we'd be sure to share this with our team for our updates. We'll spread the word once it's ready. Thanks a bunch! ^ss
@@canva No, they mean a tagged PDF. PDFs are completely inaccessible by screen readers unless they are "tagged" and currently, very few apps can do this, the main ones being Word and Adobe Reader. Look into it. It's a huge issue in the disability world.