Explore Flipsnack. Transform boring PDFs into engaging digital flipbooks. Share, engage, and track performance in the same platform.
From magazines to catalogs or private internal documents, you can make any page-flip publication look stunning with Flipsnack.
Check out examples from our customers. Digital magazines, zines, ebooks, booklets, flyers & more.
Pre-made templates to create stunning publications in minutes
Here are eight reasons why you should consider choosing interactive, digital flipbooks instead of boring and static PDFs. Check them out!
Perry 2 eager to get to work I approached my first day of class carefully. Read up on Chicago, police brutality, Obama, pop culture, basically any and everything that would prepare me for any situation brought up in conversation. I was ready. There is a different feel if you have ever been inside one of Dr. Lyn’s class. Rarely will you see a dry erase marker touch a white board mapping out some lesson plan for the day. She mostly opens up in conversation, hitting us with a question to make us completely reevaluate the way we saw the world. Once that conversation gets in motion nothing but class ending can stop the amount of hands wanting to participate. Our first topic of discussion aligned with the focal point of the class, Black masculinity. It was a topic I have never discussed in a learning environment so I was excited to explore the topic. We talked about what makes a Black man and the social responsibilities that came along with being one. In a time where Black men are being hunted and gunned down(or put in a chokehold until the air leaves their lungs) talks about what it means to be a Black man could never be more relevant. Our conversations about racial profiling had me leave class feeling angry but aware. I feel like Morehouse has given me a sense of how dangerous the world is but protected me from it at the same time. I take the brotherhood seriously and for my brother or I to be murdered like Mike Brown or Trayvon Martin or Eric Garner, really made me open my eyes and soul search on my stance on certain issues. We then dove into how we were perceived in the media, and the subliminal messages that lye in ad campaigns. On a surface level we sometime analyze ads but never with the perspective I now have. To take a look back into the early 1950’s and see how white media portrayed us in the media, was an eye opening also infuriating experience. To see the stereotypes that they reinforced at that time was sickening. Malcolm X once said “The media’s the most powerful
The cookies we use on Flipsnack's website help us provide a better experience for you, track how our website is used, and show you relevant advertising. If you want to learn more about the cookies we're using, make sure to check our Cookie policy
We use essential cookies to make our site work for you. These allow you to navigate and operate on our website.
We use performance cookies to understand how you interact with our site.They help us understand what content is most valued and how visitors move around the site, helping us improve the service we offer you.
Please note that declining these cookies will disable the ability to communicate with Flipsnack support.
We use marketing cookies to deliver ads we think you'll like.They allow us to measure the effectiveness of the ads that are relevant for you.