Below are seven flipbook styles you can use for your flipbooks. You can adapt how each publication looks and behaves to suit different content, brands, and reading preferences, so one system stays flexible across many kinds of projects.
Our default 3D flipbook delivers a smooth page-turn with depth and lighting that feels close to a printed book. It suits catalogs, magazines, and any PDF you want to present with a polished, interactive look.
The 2D flipbook uses a flat page flip without 3D perspective. It is lightweight and fast, ideal when you want clarity and performance on every device, from phones to large desktops.
Realistic flipbook adds a hard-cover look with a spine and cover treatment that resembles a physical volume. Use it for premium reports, portfolios, and branded publications.
Binder flipbook shows a spiral-bound style along the edge, perfect for manuals, training packs, and handbooks where a technical or workbook feel fits your content.
Vertical calendar flipbook flips pages upward and downward like a wall or desk calendar. You can show it with spiral binding along the edge or turn the binder off for a clean edge; either way works. The sample uses binder on so you can see the ring-bound look. It is a natural fit for tall artwork, planners, and seasonal campaigns where you want a clear vertical flow instead of a side-by-side spread.
Slider mode moves pages horizontally in a slide-style view instead of a fold. Pages glide past one another like a carousel, so the motion stays simple and quick on touchscreens and trackpads. Readers who prefer swiping through slides or wide spreads often find this layout more natural for presentations, lookbooks, and image-led PDFs where each screen is meant to stand on its own.
Vertical reader stacks pages in a scrolling column, similar to reading a long article or PDF on mobile. There is no fold animation; readers simply scroll through the full height of each page, which feels familiar from browsers and news apps. It works well for text-heavy documents, reports, and newsletters where you want linear reading and comfortable one-thumb browsing on phones.