A 600-year tradition
Ex Libris Embosser
A small, lasting mark for the books you own. Latin for 'from the books of' - and the modern, ink-free way to make every paperback, hardback, and journal in your library quietly yours.
Where ex libris began
A mark of belonging, since the 1400s
The earliest known bookplates date to the fifteenth century - small printed labels pasted inside the front cover, often illustrated by the same artists who illuminated manuscripts. By the 1700s, every serious library had one: monograms, family crests, motifs the owner cared about, sometimes a quiet motto in Latin underneath.
The tradition wasn't about pride. It was about belonging. Books, in those years, were lent often and lost often. A small mark inside the cover was the difference between a book that might come back and one that wouldn't.
Three quiet steps, and it's yours.
Choose your seal
Pick from our library of hand-drawn ex libris designs - botanicals, animals, monograms, scenes - or describe something that doesn't exist yet and we'll draw it for you.
Add your wording
From the library of, Ex libris, This book belongs to, or just your initials. Names, dates, a quiet motto - the words that will sit alongside the design for the lifetime of the book.
Press and emboss
We engrave your seal onto solid brass. One clean impression on the title page, the front endpaper, the flyleaf - the books you keep are now quietly yours.
Describe it. We'll draw it
Tell us your idea - a creature, a scene, a motif from a book that matters to you - and the Studio renders it as a one-of-a-kind seal. Nobody else will have the same ex libris as yours.
Ready when you are
Start designing your ex libris
Open the Design Studio. No commitment - describe your idea and see it drawn before you buy.
Takes about a minute.
Why ex libris is back
Books have started to feel rare again
Not in number - there are more printed than ever - but in intention. People who choose to keep paperbacks, hardbacks, journals, and notebooks in a world that increasingly doesn't are doing it for a reason. The ex libris is a way to honour that.
Five books with your seal pressed inside the front cover are, suddenly, a collection. And a finished book gifted with the seal of the giver pressed quietly inside is the kind of detail that lasts a lifetime.
Where to press it
Press your seal on the books that matter
Title page of a hardback
Clean white space, soft enough to take a clean impression. The classic place - and still the best one.
Front of a journal
The flyleaf of a notebook, sketchbook, or journal. Marks the start of every entry as belonging to you.
Wedding invitation or card
Wedding stationery, thank-you cards, gift envelopes. The ex libris becomes a quiet seal of the sender.
Designing your seal
What makes a good ex libris
Restraint
The mark sits inside the front cover for the lifetime of the book. It should look as good in fifty years as it does today - usually a single, considered design rather than three or four ideas competing.
Personal, but not literal
The best ex libris designs say something quietly. A botanical for the gardener. A fox for the reader of folklore. A small ship for someone who travels with their books. The seal isn't your face - it's a hint.
Wording that ages well
From the library of Margaret Whitlow reads better in fifty years than Maggie's Books 2026. Full names, restrained dates, simple Latin phrases - all sit comfortably alongside the design without dating it.
What readers say aftermarking their first book
Real reviews from real Stamped Pages customers. Add the Loox carousel block below this header in the theme customizer to display the live reviews here.
A few questions worth answering
What is an ex libris stamp?
Ex libris is Latin for “from the books of.” For centuries, readers have marked the books they cared about with a small seal — a quiet way of saying this one is mine. A book embosser is the modern, ink-free version: one press leaves a raised, permanent impression on the page that won’t fade, smudge, or peel.
Will an ex libris embosser damage my books?
No. The impression is gentle — it raises the paper rather than cutting it. The page stays intact and the design lasts as long as the book does.
How long do ex libris embossers last?
Solid brass plates engraved cleanly will press tens of thousands of impressions before any wear shows. Practically, that’s longer than most personal libraries.
Can I have more than one ex libris design?
Yes — many readers do. One seal for their library, another for the books they give as gifts. The clip system means you can swap designs in seconds without buying a second embosser.
Is “ex libris” the right wording for me?
Not necessarily. Ex libris is the classical phrase, but From the library of, From the books of, This book belongs to, or just your initials all work. The phrase you choose says as much about you as the design.