![]() ![]() Just make sure your organization optimizes/compresses the images for web consumption. I'm not sure the example you provided should be considered a “large background image.” Seems like a typical, moderate sized web banner to me. These days you may also be able to enforce high contrast with stroke (a.k.a., text shadow) although I haven’t really seen this done beautifully. ![]() The Nielsen Norman Group article shows examples of this. To test, make the background image completely white and check the contrast - if it is compliant in that context, your settings will (mathematically) work with any image. We managed this by creating a layout which places white text on a black semi-opaque background above the image. The content managers simply found it was easier and quicker to find images that looked good within the site design, rather than to restrict themselves to the much smaller set of images that would be compliant. In a recent project of mine, we started with the first strategy and switched to the second.
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