PageFlip.js for Restaurant Menus
A working recipe for building a restaurant menu flipbook with PageFlip.js, setup, the use-case-specific patterns that matter, and the alternatives worth checking.
Why PageFlip.js fits a restaurant menu build
A restaurant menu flipbook is read on a phone, in low light, by a hungry person who is one bad interaction away from putting the phone down. The right design philosophy is ‘zero friction’: the page-turn has to be obvious without instructions, the type has to be legible without zooming, and the load time has to be measured in single-digit seconds.
PageFlip.js sits at 807 GitHub stars, ships under the MIT license, and is written primarily in TypeScript. Evergreen browsers. ESM and UMD bundles available; works with Vite, Webpack, Rollup, and plain script tags. If your restaurant menu audience falls inside that support window, you can move on to implementation; if it does not, jump down to the alternatives section before writing any code. our editorial picks for Restaurant Menus are updated on every re-seed.
The right setup for a restaurant menu
Install PageFlip.js with the same command as a generic build, the use-case differentiation lives in the surrounding markup, the loading strategy, and the analytics, not in the install:
npm install page-flip
import { PageFlip } from 'page-flip';
The minimum-viable initialisation is intentionally close to the library’s minimum working example so you can see a page-turn working before customising:
const pageFlip = new PageFlip(el, {
width: 600, height: 800,
size: 'stretch',
showCover: true
});
pageFlip.loadFromImages(['/p1.jpg','/p2.jpg','/p3.jpg','/p4.jpg']);
What matters specifically for a restaurant menu
PageFlip.js is a reasonable choice for menus because its rendering footprint is light and the page-flip metaphor is intuitive. Pair it with deliberately oversized type (the menu is not the place to flex your typography), high-contrast colours (kitchens are bright, dining rooms are dim; design for the dim case), and clear section dividers (appetisers, mains, desserts, wine) so a diner can navigate by gesture rather than reading.
If you serve a multilingual neighbourhood, ship a separate flipbook per language rather than overloading one with toggle UI. The cognitive cost of a language switch is higher than the cost of a separate URL.
The mistake to avoid
Many menu builds embed the whole flipbook inside an over-engineered ordering app. Don’t. Keep the menu a public, link-shareable, no-login resource. That is what wins Google Maps clicks and what staff link from WhatsApp. further reading on this pattern covers the recovery playbook in detail.
Alternative libraries for a restaurant menu
If PageFlip.js turns out to be the wrong fit, the libraries below are the next-best open-source picks for the same use case, sorted by GitHub star count. Each one has a deep-dive page with feature matrix, browser support, and code samples.
FlipViewPager.Draco
Yalantis Android ViewPager extension with origami-style folding page transitions.
What to read next
- The full PageFlip.js deep-dive, feature matrix, browser support, and head-to-head verdicts.
- All indexed Restaurant Menus tools, including hosted-SaaS options, not just open-source.
- Buyer guides, opinionated, use-case-first stack picks.
- Embedding tutorials, framework-specific recipes for React, Vue, Svelte, Next.js, WordPress, and Shopify.