Festival Theatre, 13/29 Nicholson Street, Edinburgh,EH8 9FT
Kings Theatre, 2 Leven St, Edinburgh, EH3 9LQ
ACCESSIBILITY
We believe that websites should be accessible by everyone. This site has been designed with accessibility in mind and is rated W3C WAI Priority 1 level.
We welcome suggestions from visitors of the site. If you have any suggestions or find our site problematic in relation to accessibility please contact us.
Browser Settings
Many of today's browsers allow you to change the way in which you view websites, including:
- Changing the default size of the screen text
- Turning off colours
- Turning off font styles and sizes
- Applying your own style sheet
To change the text size in Internet Explorer v.6
- From the menu bar, select View
- From the View menu, select Text Size
- Select your choice of 'Largest', 'Larger', 'Medium', 'Smaller', 'Smallest' text sizes
To change the text size in Internet Explorer v.7
- Select the Page menu
- Point to Text Size
- Select your choice of 'Largest', 'Larger', 'Medium', 'Smaller', 'Smallest' text sizes
To change the text size in Mozilla Firefox 1.5/2
- Select the View menu
- Point to Text Size
- Select 'Increase' or 'Decrease'
To change the text size in Safari
- Select the View menu
- Select 'Make text bigger' or 'Make text smaller'
Descriptive link text
When the author of a site uses descriptive link text, all links on the page will make sense even when read out of context. For users of assistive technology (e.g. Screen-readers) this can allow them to quickly jump through pages of text to find relevant links.
Meaningful ALT attribute on images
Most images on this site contain additional 'alternate' text that is stored with the image. This allows users who otherwise wouldn't be able to see the image access to the stored information. Although this can help users of assistive technology (e.g. Screen-readers), this also applies to visitors who disable images because of a slow internet connection.
Any image that is considered purely decorative will have a blank alternate text (e.g. alt=""). This reduces the amount of unnecessary content on the page.


