Free Toolkit

Color Blindness Simulator (Image)Simulate how images appear to people with various types of color vision deficiency.

Color Blindness Simulator (Image) illustration
🖼️

Color Blindness Simulator (Image)

Simulate how images appear to people with various types of color vision deficiency.

How to Use
1

Upload Image

Drop or select an image to test for color accessibility.

2

Choose Type

Select a color vision deficiency type to simulate.

3

Compare

View simulated result alongside the original and download.

What Is Color Blindness Simulator (Image)?

A color blindness simulator showing how images appear to people with different color vision deficiencies. Supports protanopia (red-blind), deuteranopia (green-blind), tritanopia (blue-blind), achromatopsia (total color blindness), and partial anomalies. Essential for accessibility testing of UI designs, infographics, charts, and visual content. Uses scientifically accurate color transformation matrices applied per-pixel via Canvas API.

Why Use Our Color Blindness Simulator (Image)?

  • Scientifically accurate color transformation matrices
  • Multiple types: protan, deutan, tritan, achromat
  • Side-by-side original vs simulated comparison
  • Essential for accessible design testing

Common Use Cases

UI Design

Test interface designs for color accessibility.

Data Visualization

Ensure charts and graphs are readable for all.

Marketing

Check brand colors and materials are accessible.

Education

Understand how color vision deficiency affects perception.

Technical Guide

Each deficiency is modeled as a 3x3 color transformation matrix applied to RGB values. Protanopia uses the Brettel algorithm for absent L-cone response. Deuteranopia simulates absent M-cone. Tritanopia simulates absent S-cone. Pixel data extracted via getImageData, RGB multiplied by transformation matrix, and written back via putImageData.

Tips & Best Practices

  • 1
    Test with deuteranopia first — affects ~6% of males
  • 2
    Avoid relying solely on red/green differences
  • 3
    Use texture, patterns, or labels in addition to color
  • 4
    Test all important UI states and data visualizations

Related Tools

Frequently Asked Questions

QAccuracy?
Uses scientifically derived matrices from clinical research.
QTypes simulated?
Protanopia, deuteranopia, tritanopia, achromatopsia, and partial anomalies.
QHow common?
About 8% of men and 0.5% of women have some form.
QSide by side?
Yes — original and simulated shown side by side.
QModifies original?
No — simulation is generated separately.

About Color Blindness Simulator (Image)

Color Blindness Simulator (Image) is a free online tool from FreeToolkit.ai. All processing happens directly in your browser — your data never leaves your device. No registration required. No ads. Just fast, reliable tools.