
Thanksgiving Cornucopia
A woven horn-shaped cornucopia basket on its side, overflowing with pumpkins, gourds, apples, grapes, corn, and autumn leaves — a Thanksgiving coloring page.
A woven horn-shaped cornucopia lies on its side here, spilling a generous harvest of pumpkins, gourds, apples, grapes, corn, and autumn leaves out onto the table. The cornucopia, or "horn of plenty," is an ancient symbol of abundance, and this overflowing version packs the page with fruit and vegetables to color. That variety is the fun of it: every piece can be a different color, so kids get to mix oranges, reds, purples, greens, and yellows all in one scene. The big pumpkins and gourds suit younger colorers, while the grapes and woven basket texture give older kids smaller, satisfying detail to work on. It is also a great prompt for naming each fruit and talking about the autumn harvest. Print it on US Letter or A4 paper, and use as many crayons as you can reach to capture the bounty.
Coloring Tips
- Vary every fruit — give the apples, grapes, gourds, and corn their own colors so the harvest looks abundant.
- Woven basket — color the horn in tans and browns, following the weave lines for a basket texture.
- Start big — fill the large pumpkins and gourds first, then move to the small grapes last.