As promised, here is the email I sent to the library and the response I got in return:
Original Question
Oct 11 2025, 05:36PM via Email
Oct 15 2025, 12:25PM
Dear Mariam,
Thank you for writing, and for visiting our exhibitions! These are great questions. Folio 65 is actually an assemblage of unbound leaves from multiple copies, interleaved with facsimile pages, so what you see on display is actually a clamshell box that looks like a modern binding. Within that box are thinner folders that contain loose sheets.
The smaller folders and the clamshell box definitely add bulk, making it look much thicker than the others. Our conservation team supplied these folders and box after this copy came to the library as part of its conservation treatment.
Unfortunately, Folio 65 has not been digitized, but we do have several others that have been fully digitized: First Folios: Fully Digitized | Digital Collections.
Please let us know if you have any further questions!
Sincerely,
Library Associate, Reference
Folger Shakespeare Library
Aren't librarians wonderful? I had been hoping I was going to find out that it was full of beautiful illustrations or something like that. But this is pretty cool too. What kept catching my eye was that the part of the box we could see which I assumed was actually binding looked untouched as if the book had never been cracked open. A spine that thick would show some sign of having been opened, I would assume. But now, I understand. It's a boxful of loose papers.
There was a little game in front of the display that allowed you to pick a folio and learn some details about it and then get to select which one you'd buy if you could. (Or something like that.) Folio 65 was not in the game but I kept picking the cheaper ones as more interesting and then the poll stats would show that everyone else wanted the more expensive stuff.
I guess I don't have expensive taste, because the one I went down a rabbit hole for is a just a handful of papers, ha! But it's fun.
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