There might be a Secret Painting Hiding in that Old Book of Yours

Books can be magical things, but some as it turns out, may be more magical than others. They might look like ordinary old books, but they’re hiding a curious little secret in plain sight. A fore-edge painting is a scene painted on the edges of the pages of a book; invisible when closed. The technique was employed by high end bookmakers throughout history, and in many cases, the hidden artworks went undiscovered for decades or even centuries after their creation. Some may still be hiding amongst the bookshelves of your favourite vintage bookstore…

© VCU Libraries

Unless you fan the pages, you won’t even know it’s there at all. The art form is more likely to be found on leather bound books with gilded, or better yet, marbled pages, which do a better job of hiding the secret painting entirely. This truly rare and dwindling practice (and no, we’re not talking about the doodles on the pages of your middle school textbooks) is something that’s nearly impossible to mass produce by a printer, which makes it even more enchanting to consider how much work went into something that almost no one would ever know was there.

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It was allegedly Charles II of England who started the practice in the 17th century when a dishonest duchess at his court began borrowing his books and “forgetting” to return them. the king commissioned a court painter and together they devised a secret plan to identify the books in her collection. According to Old Front Edge Painting Art published in 1969, Charles was visiting the Duchess one day when he saw one of her unreturned books on her shelves…

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picking it up, he said, “I’ll take my book with me.”

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“but sir”, protested the lady, “that book is mine”.

“huh?” the king raised his eyebrows. then, with a sly smile, he opened the book to reveal what had been painted on the inside edges: the royal coat of arms. the gilding of the outer edges had completely obscured the identification. Acknowledging that Charles had outwitted her, the Duchess sank into a deep bow before her king.

The technique became most popular in 18th century England thanks to a publisher and bookbinder to the prince of Wales. This brings us to say that you’ll be needing to look at some rather precious books to find a fore-edge painting. A lot of collectors and bibliophiles generally disapprove of the practice because in order to see these hidden works, it requires the text to be handled in a way that would give most antiquarian book dealers heart palpitations. If you’re not very careful, you can do some damage to the spine or tear the pastedowns on the front or back cover of a book. Bear this in mind when you go looking through second-hand bookstores.

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© BiblioArchives

Martin Frost is thought to be one of the only commercial fore-edge painters in the world, who learned the art from a friend over 50 years ago. Antique examples found on eBay or Etsy can range anywhere between $300 to over $1000 – that is if the book dealer even found the book’s secret.

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and some of these rare books are even more elaborate and precious than others, and have not one but secret paintings hidden around the edges. these are known as two-way double leading edge paintings, where the pages can be fanned out in both directions to reveal two different works of art, depending on which direction you fan them.

Thicker books may hide another variant called “split double paintings”, where if the book is opened, two separate paintings will appear.

There’s also “all edge paintings”, where the the book is twisted to reveal scenes on the top and bottom page edges of the book. Again, enough to give any book collector heart palpitations.

© Eric Allix Rogers

So before we go searching old books for the location of the Knights Templar gold – (because if it wasn’t secretly planted inside a fore-edge painting of an ancient text, where else would it be?) – just remember that books are precious and fragile objects to be treated with the upmost respect.

Now then, where were we? Oh yeah …. run to the rare book section!

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