Despite using a leftover portrait from another photo shoot as the cover of its first issue, later on
Rap Pages started producing their own photos for the covers. who was its photo editor from 1993 to 1998. Describing his time in
Rap Pages, Cross said: "We had a team of A-list editors who all went on to do important things in hip-hop, and we would just sit around and have these loose, funny conversations, which is how we came up with a lot of shoot concepts." In his book
Totally Wired, the writer
Paul Gorman praised
Rap Pages as a magazine that "showcased inventive layouts and striking front covers", noting that it occurred during Sheena Lester's tenure as editor-in-chief.
Complex magazine also commended
Rap Pages, saying that "in its prime
Rap Pages ... [boasted] high-quality reporting, niche hip-hop coverage, and some very original covers". The publication placed several
Rap Pages covers in its list of the 50 greatest hip hop magazine covers; some of the covers included are an
Ol' Dirty Bastard's parody of
Janet Jackson's
Rolling Stone cover, which shows him standing behind a topless fan, covering her breasts with his hands, a cover depicting
Lauryn Hill as a four-armed goddess, and a cover depicting the group
Pharcyde wrapped in a recording tape. Another
Rap Pages cover, which
Rolling Stone magazine called "iconic", was the portrait of
the Notorious B.I.G. wearing a crown. The photograph, titled
King of New York, was taken by
Barron Claiborne, three days prior to
the rapper being assassinated on March 9, 1997. It was the last photoshoot of the Notorious B.I.G. The portrait quickly became one of the most well-known photos of the rapper. In 2020, the plastic crown used in the photo, originally purchased by Claiborne for $6, was sold through an auction for $594,750. ==References==