Accessibility Statement
Last Updated: May 7th, 2026
Horror Encyclopedia is committed to making HorrorEncyclopedia.com accessible and usable for as many visitors as possible, including visitors with disabilities.
Horror Encyclopedia is owned and operated by Christina Escamilla Publishing, a Texas DBA.
We want writers, researchers, artists, filmmakers, game designers, horror fans, and general readers to be able to access the Site’s content with clarity, consistency, and dignity.
Our Accessibility Goal
We aim to improve the accessibility and usability of HorrorEncyclopedia.com over time.
Where possible, we work toward aligning the Site with recognized accessibility practices, including the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). WCAG 2.2 is organized around four core principles: web content should be perceivable, operable, understandable, and robust.
Accessibility is an ongoing process, and we understand that websites can change as new pages, images, tools, plugins, layouts, and third-party services are added.
Measures We May Take
To support accessibility, we may make reasonable efforts to:
Use clear page titles, headings, and content structure
Write links that make sense in context
Provide alternative text for meaningful images when appropriate
Avoid relying only on color to communicate important information
Maintain readable font sizes and sufficient color contrast where possible
Organize content in a logical reading order
Review site pages for accessibility concerns
Correct known accessibility issues when reasonably possible
Consider accessibility when adding new pages, images, features, or design elements
Platform and Third-Party Limitations
Horror Encyclopedia is built on Squarespace and may use third-party tools, services, analytics, advertising systems, affiliate links, fonts, plugins, embedded features, or external links.
While we make reasonable efforts to support accessibility on the parts of the Site we control, some accessibility issues may come from platform limitations, third-party services, browser differences, device settings, or external websites.
We are not responsible for the accessibility of third-party websites or platforms linked from HorrorEncyclopedia.com.
Images and Visual Content
Horror Encyclopedia may use stock photography, Creative Commons images, original photography, permission-based images, fair-use educational images, and limited AI-generated images.
We try to provide meaningful alternative text for images when the image adds important information. Some decorative images, background images, or layout-based visuals may not include detailed descriptions.
If an image, graphic, or visual element creates an accessibility barrier, please contact us so we can review it.
Horror and Disturbing Content
Because Horror Encyclopedia discusses horror, folklore, death, violence, crime, abuse, medical subjects, and other disturbing material, some content may be emotionally difficult or unsuitable for certain readers.
Accessibility also includes reader awareness and content clarity. We may use content warnings, disclaimers, or plain-language explanations where appropriate, especially when pages involve disturbing or sensitive subject matter.
Feedback and Assistance
If you experience difficulty accessing any part of HorrorEncyclopedia.com, or if you need information in a different format, please contact us.
We will make reasonable efforts to review your request and respond.
Please include, if possible:
The page URL where the issue occurred
A brief description of the problem
The device, browser, or assistive technology you were using, if relevant
The format or assistance you need
Contact Information
For accessibility questions, requests, or feedback, contact:
Christina Escamilla Publishing
Email: Hello@stinaesc.com
Ongoing Improvements
We may update this Accessibility Statement as the Site changes or as accessibility improvements are made.