Accessibility Statement
Last updated 11-06-2026
Our commitment
Muse is for everyone who loves getting dressed, and that has to include everyone. We want Muse to be comfortable and usable whatever your sight, hearing, mobility, or way of reading a screen.
Muse is in early access and still being actively built by a small team. As the product matures, we are working towards WCAG 2.2 level AA, the widely recognised standard for accessible digital products. We are not there yet, and this statement is honest about that.
What is in place now
- A high-contrast ink-on-cream palette throughout the app, designed to stay readable.
- Scalable text that respects the font-size settings on your device.
- Clear, visible focus states so you can always see where you are when navigating by keyboard.
- Labels on interactive controls such as buttons, fields, and toggles.
- Support for the screen readers built into your platform.
Known limitations
We want to be open about where we are. There are parts of Muse that are not yet where we want them to be.
- Some screens are still being refined for screen-reader reading order and announcements, so a screen reader may occasionally read things in an unexpected sequence.
- The web app is built on Flutter web, a rendering technology where some assistive technologies behave inconsistently. We are improving this as the platform and our app evolve.
- Photo-heavy features, such as your wardrobe, depend on images you upload, which may not carry descriptions a screen reader can use.
Tell us what is hard to use
If anything in Muse is difficult or impossible for you to use, please email hello@musefashion.me and tell us what happened and what you were trying to do. Accessibility feedback is prioritised, and because the team is small, your message reaches the people building the product directly.
About this statement
This statement was prepared on 11-06-2026. We review it as Muse evolves and update it to reflect what has improved and what still needs work.