thumb|upright=1.35|Different types of endpapers, Landesbibliothek Oldenburg (Germany). thumb|Stockholm 1777 thumb|right|Marbled endpaper from Die Nachfolge Christi ed. Ludwig Donin (Vienna ca. 1875). thumb|right| Handcrafted marbled endpapers of a book manually bound in France around 1880 (Giacomo Leopardi, Œuvres, vol. 2). thumb|right|Endpapers of the original run of books in the Everyman's Library, 1906, based on the art of [[William Morris's Kelmscott Press.]] The endpapers or end-papers of a book (also known as the endsheets) are the pages that consist of a double-size sheet folded, with o
thumb|upright=1.35|Different types of endpapers, Landesbibliothek Oldenburg (Germany). thumb|Stockholm 1777 thumb|right|Marbled endpaper from Die Nachfolge Christi ed. Ludwig Donin (Vienna ca. 1875). thumb|right| Handcrafted marbled endpapers of a book manually bound in France around 1880 (Giacomo Leopardi, Œuvres, vol. 2). thumb|right|Endpapers of the original run of books in the Everyman's Library, 1906, based on the art of [[William Morris's Kelmscott Press.]] The endpapers or end-papers of a book (also known as the endsheets) are the pages that consist of a double-size sheet folded, with one half pasted against an inside cover (the pastedown), and the other serving as the first free page (the free endpaper or flyleaf). Thus, the front endpapers precede the title page and the text, whereas the back endpapers follow the text. Booksellers sometimes refer to the front endpaper as FEP.
Before mass printing in the 20th century, it was common for the endpapers of books to have paper marbling. Sometimes the endpapers are used for maps or other relevant information. They are the traditional place to put bookplates, or an owner's inscription.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).