Brand Identity Document
From Experience to Empowerment.
Business Name
Markley AbilityWorks
Tagline
From Experience to Empowerment.
Location
Rhode Island
Mission
If my content, my story, or I can help one person, I know I’ve done my job.
Services
Peer support and technology services for individuals with developmental disabilities in Rhode Island
Four words that define how Markley AbilityWorks shows up — in every interaction, every piece of content, and every design decision. When something feels off-brand, measure it against these four words.
Rooted in lived experience and genuine commitment to the people we serve.
This isn’t a service, it’s a relationship built on shared understanding.
Every interaction is designed to build confidence and independence.
A steady, reassuring presence for people navigating complex systems.
These values are not aspirational — they describe how Markley AbilityWorks already operates. They should be evident in every service delivered, every message sent, and every design produced.
Rooted in a calling to serve others, we show up fully for every person we walk alongside — not because it’s a job, but because it matters.
Every person deserves to be seen, heard, and treated with respect. We honor the inherent worth of every individual we serve.
We do what we say, say what we mean, and show up with honesty and consistency.
We lead with understanding, not judgment — meeting people exactly where they are.
We take seriously the trust placed in us by the people we serve and the communities we work within.
The Markley AbilityWorks voice is how Nathan sounds when he’s speaking peer-to-peer — direct, warm, grounded in lived experience. Copy should feel like a conversation, not a brochure.
Phrases That Fit
Phrases to Avoid
These eight colors make up the complete brand palette. Use them consistently. Navy and gold are the primary pairing. Off-white replaces pure white as the default background for warmth and reduced glare.
Navy
#1a3a5c
Primary color, backgrounds, headings — authority and trust
Navy Light
#234e7d
Hover states, gradients, secondary navy uses
Gold
#cc9c3d
Accent color, highlights — warmth and energy
Gold Dark
#a87a28
Gold hover states, borders, depth
Off White
#f9f7f4
Page backgrounds, light sections, breathing room
White
#ffffff
Text on dark backgrounds, clean contrast
Text Dark
#1a1a1a
Primary body text
Muted
#767676
Secondary text, captions, metadata
Two typefaces work together: Nunito brings warmth and clarity to headings and UI; Atkinson Hyperlegible brings proven accessibility to body text. Both are available via Google Fonts.
Used for headings, labels, navigation, buttons, and UI elements. Semi-Bold (600) for most headings; Bold (700) for display text and strong emphasis.
Nunito — Semi-Bold 600
Nunito — Bold 700
Used for all body copy and long-form reading. Designed by the Braille Institute specifically to maximize legibility for readers with low vision and dyslexia. Body text minimum: 18px. Never use below 15px in any context.
Atkinson Hyperlegible — Regular 400
Atkinson Hyperlegible — Bold 700
The logo is currently in development. This section documents the creative brief for the designer.
A combination mark — a symbol paired with a wordmark. The symbol should depict a human figure or silhouette in motion within a clean geometric form, suggesting a path or journey forward with a connection or togetherness element. The concept is a reimagining of the classic accessibility symbol as something more human, dynamic, and forward-moving.
The design is rooted in a Christ-centered foundation — expressed not through explicit religious imagery, but through the values of servant leadership, dignity, and walking alongside others. The logo should reflect these guiding principles through its warmth, humanity, and sense of purposeful movement forward together.
The symbol should feel: human but geometric · warm but clean · simple but meaningful
Both versions must be fully designed and usable independently.
Version A"Markley AbilityWorks"
on a single line
beside the symbol
Version B"Markley" on top
"AbilityWorks" below
stacked beside the symbol
All four variations must be delivered. No gradients in any logo variation — flat colors only.
Full ColorOn white or off-white background
Navy + Gold
Full Color ReversedOn navy background
White + Gold
Single Color Navy#1a3a5c
Flat, no accent gold
Single Color White#ffffff
For dark backgrounds
SVG is the primary format for all web use. PNGs should be delivered in three versions: transparent background for flexible placement, white background for documents and presentations, and navy background for dark-background use. PDF for print production. All four color variations must be delivered in all formats.
Accessibility is not just a technical requirement for Markley AbilityWorks — it is core to the brand mission. Nathan’s work is rooted in lived experience with disability. Every design choice must be made with real users in mind, including those with visual, cognitive, and motor differences.
All text must meet WCAG 2.1 AA contrast minimums. Never use color alone to convey meaning. All images must have descriptive alt text that communicates what the image shows, not just that an image exists. Gold (#cc9c3d) on Navy (#1a3a5c) achieves a 4.66:1 contrast ratio — passing AA for all text sizes.
| Combination | Text | Background | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Navy text on Off-White | #1a3a5c |
#f9f7f4 |
AA PASS |
| Gold on Navy | #cc9c3d |
#1a3a5c |
AA PASS |
| Dark Text on Off-White | #1a1a1a |
#f9f7f4 |
AA PASS |
| White on Navy | #ffffff |
#1a3a5c |
AA PASS |
A note on our commitment: Accessibility is how we show respect for every person who interacts with this brand. Every design deliverable should be tested with real users, including those using screen readers, magnification, keyboard-only navigation, and high-contrast mode. Atkinson Hyperlegible was chosen as the body font specifically because it was designed by the Braille Institute to maximize legibility for readers with low vision and dyslexia.
When in doubt, ask: would a person navigating complex systems — who may be overwhelmed, fatigued, or using assistive technology — be able to use this comfortably? If not, redesign it.