Accessibility Work

I work in accessibility across design, development, evaluation, and research — focusing on how real people actually use technology, especially when tools and assumptions break down.

My approach is shaped by lived experience as a blind user, long-term work with assistive technologies, and close collaboration with designers, developers, and researchers. I’m less interested in checklist compliance and more interested in whether something actually works in practice.

What I work on


  • Accessibility reviews and audits (with real user impact in mind)

  • Assistive technology testing (screen readers, keyboard navigation, cognitive flow)

  • Design and development feedback grounded in actual usage

  • Accessibility support for content, documentation, and writing

  • Mentoring and training for designers, developers, and researchers working with accessibility

  • Mentoring and guidance for new accessibility testers and consultants entering the field

  • Advisory work with teams building inclusive products and services

I care about how people learn accessibility, not just what they ship — especially when they’re early in their practice and still finding their footing.

How I tend to work

I work best in collaboration — embedded with teams, asking uncomfortable questions, testing assumptions, and translating accessibility theory into practical decisions. I’m comfortable sitting in ambiguity and slowing things down when clarity matters more than speed.

Get in touch

If you’d like to collaborate, ask a question, or explore accessibility work together, you can reach me via the contact page.