ColorSense was designed for people with vision conditions — but it turns out, confidence about color is something almost everyone wants.
Select a condition to understand what it is, how common it is, and how ColorSense helps.
Color blindness doesn’t mean seeing in black and white — it means certain colors are indistinguishable from each other. The most common form, red-green color blindness, affects roughly 8% of men and 0.5% of women.
Navy looks identical to black. Certain greens and reds are the same shade. Olive and brown are indistinguishable. Getting dressed means guessing — and guessing wrong, repeatedly, in public.
Low vision is a visual impairment that can’t be fully corrected with glasses. It can mean blurred central vision, reduced contrast sensitivity, tunnel vision, or light sensitivity. Most people with low vision retain some functional sight.
The challenge isn’t that colors disappear — it’s that distinguishing subtle shades requires detail the eye can no longer resolve. ColorSense gives a definitive answer regardless of visual acuity.
Central vision loss means the area you’d look at to inspect a fabric has no resolution. Peripheral vision is intact — but peripheral vision doesn’t resolve fine color differences. ColorSense doesn’t require visual acuity at all.
For people who are blind, color is a completely non-visual category. They may have a rich understanding of color — but have no independent way to verify what color a garment actually is.
ColorSense requires nothing but finding a device you can locate by feel and pressing one button. The answer comes back in spoken words. No screen required. Ever.
The tactile ridge and weighted base mean the device is findable and orientable without sight. In total darkness. Half asleep. Press once, hear the answer, done.
Age-related macular degeneration and other conditions of aging vision affect hundreds of millions of adults over 60. Central vision loss is the most common result — the exact center of your visual field blurs or disappears.
ColorSense was designed to be as simple as a light switch. One button. One answer. Done. A caregiver sets it up once; the user never touches a screen again.
No re-pairing. No software updates to navigate. No battery indicator to decode. No app to open. It just works — the same way, every morning.
Not everyone who wants ColorSense has a diagnosed vision condition. Navy vs. black in a poorly lit closet is a problem for anyone. ColorSense gives anyone a fast, reliable, independent answer about color.
Caregivers buying for a parent. Interior designers evaluating swatches. People who simply want confidence. The most accessible device is the one you can use without thinking about it.
Most closets have terrible lighting. Most people can’t reliably tell very similar dark colors apart. ColorSense uses the same spectral physics that solves it for people who need it most.
Upload any image and see how it appears through different vision conditions. Simulation is approximate — real experience is more nuanced.
Images are processed in your browser — nothing is uploaded to our servers. • Simulations are educational approximations.
Three principles above all others in every design decision.
The answer is always spoken. No screen to check, no app to open. But the device also has physical controls and haptic feedback. Voice is the primary interface — not an accessibility add-on.
No app to install, no Bluetooth to pair, no battery indicator to check on a companion device. It’s a tool, not a system.
A caregiver sets up ColorSense once. From that day forward: press, hear, done. No updates to navigate. No re-pairing. No learning curve that grows.
“The most accessible device is the one you can use without thinking about it.”— ColorSense Design Principle
Early reservations get first units, locked pricing, and a free 3-month Care Plan.
Reserve ColorSense — $149