Why pure black text is usually wrong
Pure black (#000000) on a white (#ffffff) background produces approximately 21:1 contrast — the maximum possible. This is not a problem of accessibility, it is a problem of comfort. High-contrast reading environments cause pupil constriction and fatigue over extended reading sessions. Editorial publications, premium brand websites, and reading-focused interfaces consistently use off-blacks: dark gray-browns in the range #1a1a1a to #333333 that reduce contrast to 12:1 to 16:1 while remaining far above the WCAG AA threshold. The choice of off-black also carries temperature. A warm off-black like #1c1a17 reads as organic and editorial. A neutral off-black like #1a1a1a reads as technical. A cool off-black like #1a1c21 reads as precise and systematic. This distinction is most visible in body text at length.
