Website terms

By entering and using this web site you are agreeing to the terms and conditions stated here in accordance with the law.

Terms

1. The copyright in the material contained in this website belongs to David Siddall Antiques except where it is stated otherwise. All rights are reserved. No part of this web site may be copied or published without prior consent from the owner.

2. The copyright for all photographs and images used on this website, except where it is stated otherwise, belongs solely to David Siddall Antiques. All rights are reserved. They may not be copied or published without prior consent from the owner.

3. David Siddall Antiques has made every effort to ensure that all information contained within this website is correct at the time of going live, to the extent permitted by law. David Siddall Antiques shall not be liable to any person for any loss or damage whatsoever, which may arise from any reliance upon, the use of or any dealings with any of the information contained in this website.

4. Mention of third-party products, companies and websites on this site is for informational purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation. David Siddall Antiques assumes no responsibility with regard to the selection, performance or use of these products, vendors or information. Information is provided only as a convenience for the users of this website.

5. David Siddall Antiques makes no representation whatsoever regarding the content of any other websites which you may access from this website. A link to another website does not mean that David Siddall Antiques endorses or accepts any responsibility for the content or use of such website.

Web Accessibility Statement

Whilst creating this web site we have made every effort to ensure that all pages are accessible to everyone according to the W3C WAI guidelines. Whilst many W3C standards remain intentionally vague and therefore subject to individual judgement, some can be automatically tested. We have run a variety of recognised automated tests and reviewed all pages created. We have made every effort to comply with the accessibility standards and guidelines from the W3C WAI to at least priority 2, though we recognise that owing to the many different interpretations of the guidelines, and the nature of the information being represented, there may be instances where this may be seen not to be the case.

If you have any difficulty accessing any part of the site, please let us know and we will do our best to rectify the problem immediately.

W3C Standards:

We have made every effort to ensure the following:

All pages are W3C Web Accessibility Initiative AA approved, complying with priority 1 and 2 guidelines of the W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. (By default most pages become AAA, priority 3, compliant to the W3C WCAG)
All pages created are Section 508 Guidelines approved (U.S. Federal Government)
All HTML pages on this site validate as W3C XHTML 1.0 Transitional
All Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) used on this site validate as W3C Cascading Style Sheets, level 2 CSS2 Specification

Accessibility in Design:

We have made every effort to ensure the following:

All pages on this site use structured semantic markup.

Content has been separated from visual design and cascading style sheets (CSS) are used for visual layout.
Only relative font sizes, compatible with the user-specified “text size” option in visual browsers are used.
If your browser or browsing device does not support style sheets, the page content is still readable.
Navigation items have background changes to highlight links.
Many links have title attributes which describe the link in greater detail, unless the text of the link already fully describes the target.
Links are written to make sense out of context.
Links to external web sites open up a new browser window where this is supported by the browser.
All content images used in this site include descriptive ALT attributes.
Decorative graphics include null ALT attributes.
No images are used to exclusively convey information.
No information is exclusively conveyed using colour.
Tables are only used for layout purposes if there is no other feasible way of representing the information to the required effect.