If you remember, before the Industrial Revolution, it was common for paper to have a very high rag content. So the fibers in that paper were long and flexible, and it would stay white for a long time.
Once you get to the Industrial Revolution, however, paper became much more cheaply made, and rags were in short supply to keep up with production. So things like wood pulp and other things with shorter fibers were used in a higher proportion. That led to a paper that wouldn’t age as gracefully— it would start getting yellow, and the paper itself would become brittle and break easily, as time passed.
So the color of paper— like an original 1633 Bible— would hinge more on the quality of its fibers (and its cotton/rag content) rather than its age.
So this one has a publication date of 1599, although it’s not actually a 1599 Bible. (Big long story there. It’s old— but it’s probably 17th century.)
It’s got some spotting to the paper, but you see the coloration is way better than, say, a paperback from 1970, even though it’s probably somewhere in the neighborhood of 400 years old.
This one is a 1600 printing of a 1582 Rheims Bible.
So you can see it’s got a little deterioration going on, but overall, it’s in pretty good shape.
Having trouble figuring this one out— I don’t know enough to know if it’s 1609 (the date on the page) or 1810 (a reference to an inscription by a previous owner).
Anyhow, its paper is pretty clean.
This one is 1632. The paper is pretty clean here as well.
- The paper’s pretty good.
So, I think your paper compares pretty well to some of the actual antique Bibles.
I’d probably look closely at the type itself, rather than the tint of the paper. The worst reproductions are the ones that just look like a bad fifth-generation Xerox, especially when it comes to the engravings or woodcuts. If it’s got pretty decent clarity and sharpness to its line, I’d be happy. If it was blurred and difficult to read, then I’d probably
save up and buy myself a copy of the real thing.