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Meet the Expert

Maria Reyes

Senior Colour & UX Design Strategist at Isla Horizon Ltd

14 years crafting vibrant tropical palettes for Philippine digital experiences. She’s the designer behind 200+ island-inspired websites, where coral sunsets meet accessibility standards.

Maria Reyes, Senior Colour & UX Design Strategist, portrait in professional setting

What Maria Brings to the Table

Her focus: tropical colour systems that work everywhere

Tropical Colour Strategy

Develops island-inspired palettes using warm coral, ocean teal, and lush emerald green. Every colour chosen for both beauty and readability across devices.

Mobile Accessibility

Tests vibrant palettes on small screens. Makes sure that bold sunset gradients don’t sacrifice contrast ratios or readability. WCAG AA compliant, always.

Gradient Transitions

Designed a proprietary framework for testing gradient shifts across browsers. Tropical sky transitions that actually perform well on all devices.

Design Systems

Builds scalable colour frameworks for entire organizations. Once a system’s in place, teams can maintain the tropical aesthetic without losing consistency.

In Conversation

Questions about tropical design, accessibility, and the Philippines

How did you get started with tropical colour design?

I started in 2010 at a Manila digital agency, working on tourism websites. We’d use these beautiful coral and teal tones, and honestly, they looked amazing on mockups. But when clients checked on their phones at the beach — terrible contrast, hard to read. That’s when I realized: vibrant doesn’t mean broken.

I spent years studying how sunlight hits water, how our eyes perceive warm versus cool tones on small screens, and what actually works in the Philippines’ bright daylight. The breakthrough came when I stopped thinking about colours as decorations and started treating them like a system — intentional, testable, accountable.

What’s the challenge with vibrant palettes on mobile?

Two things. First, screen brightness changes how colours feel. A coral that’s stunning on a desktop display can look washed out on a phone in sunlight, or too intense indoors. You’ve got to test across lighting conditions, not just RGB values.

Second, contrast ratios get tricky. I wanted to use a gorgeous sunset coral (#e11d48) as an accent, but on white backgrounds it only hits 4.8:1 contrast. That’s just barely WCAG AA. So we layer — use coral for headings and icons, darker shades for body text. The palette stays tropical, readability stays solid.

Why focus specifically on Philippine-inspired design?

The Philippines has this incredible natural palette. Turquoise waters, sunset gradients that change every evening, lush jungle greens. It’s not just beautiful — it’s authentic to the people and brands I’m designing for. When a Filipino company uses these colours, they’re not borrowing aesthetics from somewhere else. They’re representing home.

Plus, the climate here is intense. Bright sun, high humidity, tropical weather. The websites I design need to work in those conditions. A colour system that looks good on a phone at noon in Manila? That works everywhere.

What does your typical colour strategy process look like?

We start with what the brand wants to feel like. Energetic? Calming? Trustworthy? Then I pull inspiration from Philippine landscapes — specific islands, specific times of day. Not generic “tropical,” but actual colours from actual places.

I build a full palette: primary colours, secondary accents, neutrals, semantic colours (success, warning, error). Then comes the hard part — testing. We run contrast checks at WCAG AA and AAA levels. We test on 15+ devices across iOS and Android. We check gradients at different zoom levels. We even print samples and hold them up to sunlight.

Once the system’s locked, we create guidelines for the team. How to pair coral with teal. When to use white backgrounds versus off-white. How gradients should transition. That’s where the framework lives.

What’s something people get wrong about vibrant design?

They think “vibrant” means every colour at full saturation. That’s actually exhausting to look at. Real vibrant design is about smart contrast — a bold coral accent against clean white, surrounded by breathing room. The colours pop because they’re not fighting each other.

Also, people skip the mobile testing. They design on big screens where everything looks amazing, then ship it. That’s how you end up with text you can’t read on a phone. The tropical palette I develop works on a 320px screen first, then scales up beautifully to desktop.

Background & Credentials

Education, certifications, and professional experience

Education

Graphic Design Degree

University of the Philippines College of Fine Arts, 2010

Web Accessibility Certification

WCAG 2.1 Level AA, International Webmasters Association, 2018

Advanced CSS & Design Systems

Frontend Masters, 2020

Experience

Senior Colour & UX Design Strategist

Isla Horizon Ltd, 2022 – Present

Leads colour strategy division. Mentors junior designers. Conducts quarterly workshops on Philippine-inspired web aesthetics.

Lead Design Strategist

Manila Digital Collective, 2017 – 2022

Developed colour frameworks for 120+ digital properties. Built accessibility testing protocols.

Graphic Designer

Manila Digital Agency, 2010 – 2017

Started in tourism web design. Pioneered tropical palette testing methodology.

Recognition

Regional Design Excellence Award

Asian Digital Design Federation, 2021

For innovative tropical colour systems and accessibility integration.

Featured Designer

Design Observer & Philippine Design Magazine, 2019–2023

Multiple articles on island-inspired web aesthetics and colour theory.

Speaker

Design conferences across Asia Pacific, 2018–Present

Topics: tropical colour systems, mobile accessibility, gradient design.

Design Philosophy

How Maria approaches colour, accessibility, and authentic design

Colour Tells a Story

Every colour choice should connect to something real. A teal that echoes Philippine waters. A coral inspired by actual sunsets. When designers use colours thoughtfully, they’re not just making things pretty — they’re creating a sense of place. That matters.

Vibrant Doesn’t Mean Broken

You don’t have to choose between bold aesthetics and accessibility. The two go hand in hand. We’re past the days of gray-on-gray “accessible” websites. A well-designed tropical palette passes WCAG AA standards and looks stunning. That’s the work.

Mobile First, Always

If it doesn’t work on a 320px phone screen in bright sunlight, it doesn’t work. Period. That’s our baseline. Everything else is a bonus. The Philippines is a mobile-first market — our colour systems have to respect that from day one.

Systems Over One-Offs

I don’t design individual websites. I design systems. Once a colour framework’s in place, a team of ten designers can work consistently without her checking every decision. That’s scalability. That’s where the real impact happens.

The Journey

How Maria got here

2010

Started at a Manila digital agency

Fresh out of UP Fine Arts, diving into tourism website design. First experiments with coral and teal tones. Learned fast that pretty colours and readable text don’t always go together.

2014

Started testing colours seriously

Spent months building a testing protocol for gradient transitions. Tested on 20+ devices. Documented everything. This became the foundation for her later framework.

2018

Breakthrough with proprietary gradient framework

Released her methodology for testing gradient transitions across browsers and devices. Other designers started using it. First regional design publication featured her work.

2021

Regional Design Excellence Award

Recognized for combining tropical aesthetics with accessibility. 100+ websites using her colour systems. Started speaking at regional conferences.

2022

Joined Isla Horizon Ltd

Established the colour strategy division. Now mentoring designers, running workshops, and continuing to push what’s possible with island-inspired web design.

14

Years in tropical web design

200+

Philippine digital properties designed

4

Regional design awards

50+

Design workshops conducted

Featured Articles by Maria

Deep dives into tropical colour design, accessibility, and web systems

Building Colour Harmony with Tropical Tones

April 2, 2026

How to pair coral, teal, and emerald green without creating visual chaos. We’ll explore complementary relationships, saturation levels, and how these combinations perform on mobile screens across the Philippines.

Read the article

Gradient Transitions Inspired by Tropical Skies

March 29, 2026

A technical guide to CSS gradients that mimic sunset colours and ocean horizons. Includes testing methodology for ensuring these transitions work across browsers and devices without performance hits.

Read the article

WCAG Compliance with Vibrant Colour Schemes

March 24, 2026

Vibrant doesn’t mean inaccessible. Learn how to build tropical palettes that pass WCAG AA standards. We’ll cover contrast ratios, semantic colour usage, and testing tools Maria uses daily.

Read the article

Explore Tropical Design

Discover more articles on vibrant colour palettes, accessible design systems, and island-inspired web aesthetics.