PageFlip (original)
The original npm pageflip package; a minimal canvas renderer focused on raw 60fps page turning.
What PageFlip (original) is, in one paragraph
PageFlip (original) is an open-source flipbook library aimed at the Digital Magazines segment of the digital-publishing market. It currently sits at 0 GitHub stars and is licensed under MIT, which means you can fork, vendor, and ship it inside commercial projects without the licensing complexity of a hosted SaaS. The library’s primary language is JavaScript, and it has been actively used in production since at least 2019. Teams reach for PageFlip (original) when they need real control over the page-flip experience, the kind of control that hosted viewers like Issuu or Calaméo cannot give you because their viewers live behind an iframe you do not own.
The reason PageFlip (original) shows up so frequently in shortlists is that it solves the actual hard problem of building a flipbook on the web: convincing a browser to render a believable book-curl with low-jank frame timing across desktop and mobile, while still letting you put real, indexable content underneath. related performance considerations are worth reviewing before you commit, because the rendering strategy a library picks (DOM transforms vs Canvas vs WebGL) determines how it scales as your page count grows past 50, 100, or 500 pages.
Browser & platform support
Evergreen + iOS Safari 12+, Android Chrome 70+.
If your audience skews toward older Android devices, embedded browsers (in-app webviews on iOS and Android), or corporate IE/Edge-Legacy fleets, run a real device test before committing, the documented support matrix is the floor, not a guarantee. We have also seen flipbook libraries behave very differently when loaded inside a parent iframe, behind aggressive corporate proxies, or under restrictive Content Security Policies, so set up a representative staging environment before you finalise the choice.
Feature matrix
| Feature | Supported |
|---|---|
| Responsive sizing | Yes |
| Touch / swipe gestures | Yes |
| Page-turn sound effects | No |
| Page zoom | No |
| Thumbnail navigation | No |
| Hardware-accelerated transforms | Yes |
| Pinch-to-zoom on mobile | No |
| Right-to-left page order | No |
The matrix above is opinionated. “Supported” means the feature ships in the library’s public API or is documented as a built-in option, not that you can build it on top with enough custom code. Most flipbook libraries can be extended to support every cell in this table, but the further you stray from the supported list, the more friction you incur and the more brittle your viewer becomes when the library publishes its next minor version.
Install
npm install pageflip
Code sample
The minimum working example for PageFlip (original) looks like this. It is intentionally close to what you would paste into a fresh project just to see the page-flip animation work, before customising shadows, gestures, and analytics:
import { Pageflip } from 'pageflip';
const pf = new Pageflip(document.getElementById('book'), { width: 600, height: 800 });
pf.loadFromHTML(document.querySelectorAll('.page'));
From there, the typical hardening steps are: load page assets lazily, attach analytics events to the library’s page-change callback, deep-link the current page to a URL hash so readers can share specific spreads, and add a print stylesheet so power-users can export PDF copies. The tutorials index walks through each of those workflows.
Ideal use case
PageFlip (original) is the right pick when you are building Digital Magazines-style content. That is not just a marketing label, it shapes which features matter. For a digital magazines, the audience is typically sitting on a phone or tablet, scrolling for entertainment, expecting a magazine-like reading rhythm with sharp typography and full-bleed photography. Pick a library that matches the rhythm of that audience, not the one with the most stars.
How PageFlip (original) stacks up against alternatives
The alternatives below are libraries that solve the same core problem but from a different angle. We maintain a dedicated comparison index for the most common head-to-heads:
StPageFlip
Modern, dependency-free TypeScript page-flip library with realistic shadows and gradients.
PageFlip.js
Modern ESM page-flip library (the npm-packaged distribution of StPageFlip).
If you have time for only one comparison, start with Turn.js vs StPageFlip vs BookBlock, it is the foundational decision most teams make before drilling into framework wrappers or PDF-first viewers. our verdict on each library changes year-to-year as upstream repos evolve.
Use PageFlip (original) for a specific use case
Each link below opens a 300-word working recipe: setup, the use-case-specific patterns that matter, the mistake to avoid, and the alternatives worth knowing.
Where to go next
- How to embed a flipbook in your website, the framework-agnostic starting point.
- Deep-linking flipbook pages with URL hashes, essential for SEO and sharing.
- Lazy-loading page images for fast time-to-first-flip, the single biggest performance lever.
- Browse all Digital Magazines tools, see what else fits this category.
- All library × use-case recipes, the full 250-cell matrix.