Yeah, so this email is beautiful. They essentially show you 12 different layouts but use the images to do the talking. I could see another company using each layout as its row and making the email extremely image-heavy. However, this is easy to consume. Minimal text with varying sizes and colors helps out with the hierarchy.
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Looks aren’t everything. Does this email follow key accessibility best practices? Our friends at Litmus ran the test.
Emails should have a "meta content-type" and defined character set.
Email headings should be well structured. This will help screen readers easily navigate content.
Specifying "alt text" for these images helps screen readers describe the image.
Text to voice recording and transcript for hearing impaired.
Larger paragraphs of text should be left-justified to improve readability for some readers.
Table roles should be clearly defined. This helps screen readers determine how to interpret the table.
Without a [lang] attribute, screen readers will assume the email is in the default language the subscriber chose when setting up their screen reader. If your email is not in that user’s language, the screen reader may not accurately transcribe your message.