Sensory Friendly

A calmer Wordmark Press for dyslexia and autism

These settings are designed for sensory-sensitive readers and writers — including people with dyslexia and autism. Pick the font, size, spacing, contrast, and motion that work best for you. Settings are saved on this device and apply across every page. You can also open this panel from the accessibility button in the bottom-left of any screen.

Accessibility settings

Sensory-friendly presets

One-tap starting points. You can fine-tune anything below afterwards.

Color theme

Switch between light and dark, or follow your device. Currently following your system (light).

Text size

Scales every text on the site. Currently 100%.

Letter & line spacing

More space between letters, words, and lines makes text easier to track.

Calm contrast

Softens visual intensity for sensory-sensitive readers. Choose how much to warm and dim the page — pure white/black are replaced with cream and sepia to reduce glare and sensory overload.

About these settings

Built with both dyslexia and autism in mind — fonts that reduce letter confusion, generous spacing, calm contrast, and respect for reduced-motion preferences.

  • Lexend is designed to improve reading proficiency and is research-backed for many readers, including those with dyslexia.
  • Atkinson Hyperlegible is by the Braille Institute. Its highly distinct letterforms help tell similar characters apart (e.g. 1 vs l, 0 vs O).
  • OpenDyslexic weights the bottom of each letter to anchor it visually and uses unique shapes to reduce mirror-flipping (b/d, p/q).
  • Reduced motion & calm contrast help sensory-sensitive readers, including many autistic users, by limiting animation and softening visual intensity.
  • Browser-level features like increasing zoom (Ctrl/Cmd +) and using your OS's "Reduce motion" setting are also respected.

Accessibility test report

14 automated checks covering focus trap, focus restoration, ARIA state, and the keyboard reference panel — all currently passing.