Try EnChroma where color comes alive.
Discover 300+ museums, libraries, parks, and schools worldwide that lend EnChroma glasses, or have them installed as scenic viewers, so anyone with color vision deficiency can experience color from a new perspective.
Featured moment
"Yesterday my family explored The Valley of Fire State Park in Nevada. While in the visitors center we were surprised to see an EnChroma View Finder. My son Gabriel is 10 years old and is red-green color blind. For the first time he was able to see improved color. He was smiling, he cried, and was in awe as he took in the scene before him. Everyone in the room, even strangers, were moved to tears sharing this experience with him. That wouldn't have been possible without this technology."
Find a location
Search by city or name, or browse the map. Filter by location type to find exactly what you're looking for nearby.
Why letters — not just colors — on the map
About 1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women have color vision deficiency. A red pin and a green pin can look identical to them. We follow WCAG 1.4.1 ("Use of Color"): color is never the only signal. Every pin carries a letter (M, Sc, L, P, S, O) and every program has its own icon badge, so the map reads clearly whether you see color the typical way or not.
Read our guide to designing for color accessibility →How to use the CAP Map
Whether you're planning a family trip or just want to try EnChroma for the first time, it takes three simple steps.
Find a location
Search by city or browse the map. Filter by museum, science center, library, park, or school to find where you can borrow EnChroma glasses or look through a permanent scenic viewer.
Plan your visit
Click a pin to see the address, hours of operation, website, and phone number. Everything you need to plan ahead. Before you go, call the location to confirm they have EnChroma glasses available to borrow, since inventory can vary by day.
Experience color
Try the glasses on site, at the museum, from the overlook, or wherever you borrowed them. Then tell us how it went. Share your moment by tagging @enchroma on socials.
Featured locations
A handful of the incredible places where people are experiencing color from a new perspective for the first time.
Georgia O'Keeffe Museum
Visitors who are color blind can borrow EnChroma glasses at the museum to experience O'Keeffe's iconic palette, from the reds of the New Mexico desert to her vibrant florals.
Read more at the O'Keeffe Museum →
Centre Pompidou
The first museum in France to lend EnChroma glasses. Visitors can borrow a pair right from the coat room supporting an estimated 128,000 color-blind guests each year.
Read more at Centre Pompidou →
Van Gogh Museum
The Van Gogh Museum lends EnChroma glasses to visitors who are color blind, offering a new way to engage with Van Gogh's use of color.
Read more at the Van Gogh Museum →"Yes they worked. Yes I could see colors. Yes I almost collapsed into the art. Yes I lost it. And yes I ordered a pair."
Bring EnChroma to your community.
We partner with museums, libraries, parks, and schools to make color accessible for everyone. We'll help you choose the right program, loaner glasses, installed viewers, or both! And support you every step of the way.
Apply to join CAP
Tell us about your organization and we'll follow up as soon as humanly possible.
Frequently asked
What is the Color Accessibility Program?
The Color Accessibility Program (CAP) is EnChroma's initiative to put color-vision-enhancing glasses in public places so anyone can try them, for free! Participating locations include museums, libraries, parks, and schools around the world.
Are the glasses really free to use?
Yes. At participating locations, you can try EnChroma glasses on-site or borrow them, some libraries even let you check them out with your library card, some parks have them installed as scenic viewfinders.
Do you need to book a visit in advance?
Most locations are walk-in, but we always recommend calling ahead to confirm EnChroma glasses are available to borrow that day. A few locations also offer appointments or have limited loaner inventory. Click a pin to see the address, hours, website, and phone number for the location you want to visit.
How does my organization become a CAP partner?
Fill out the application above. A CAP team member will reach out as soon as possible to discuss the right program for your audience, loaner kits, installed viewers, or educational partnerships.
