Flower Coloring Pages
12 free printable pages · print at home or color online
Flower Garden Scene
Bee on a Daisy
Lotus Flower on Water
Cherry Blossom Branch
Flower Bouquet in a Vase
Round Flower Wreath
Easy Daisy
Cute Smiling Flower
Three Garden Tulips
Blooming Rose
Cheerful Sunflower
Flowers are one of the most loved subjects to color — calming for adults and cheerful for kids — and our free flower coloring pages capture them in clear, bold outlines. You'll find garden favorites like the sun-following sunflower, the layered rose, the spring tulip, the simple daisy, and the springtime cherry blossom, plus relaxing flower mandalas and full bouquets. As kids color, they learn flower names and parts — petals, stem, leaves, and the pollen-rich center — and notice how many petals each bloom has. Did you know sunflower heads track the sun across the sky, and a single sunflower can hold over a thousand tiny seeds? Roses have grown in gardens for thousands of years. Print as many pages as you like — they're free, need no sign-up, and are ready the moment you are.
🖨️ How-To Guide: Download & Print Your Flower Coloring Pages
- Pick your flowers: Scroll the collection and choose your favorite blooms — grab a few for variety.
- Click the download button: Each page has a button right below it — one click saves the high-resolution printable to your device.
- Open the file: Open it in any standard PDF or image viewer — nothing to install.
- Print at home or school: Choose A4 or US Letter paper and turn on "fit to page" for clean scaling.
- Start coloring: Hand out the crayons, markers, or colored pencils and let the petals bloom!
🌸 Activity Ideas Using Flower Coloring Pages
- Name the Flower Parts: After coloring, point out the petals, stem, leaves, and center — a gentle, hands-on plant science lesson.
- Mother's Day Card: Color a flower page, fold it in half, and turn it into a homemade greeting card for mom, grandma, or a teacher.
- Paper Bouquet: Color several flowers, cut them out, tape them to straws or sticks, and arrange them in a cup for a bouquet that never wilts.
- Count the Petals: Compare a five-petal daisy to a many-petaled rose and count along — easy early math woven into coloring time.
- Spring Window Display: Color a whole garden of flowers, then tape them to a window to make a bright, cheerful springtime scene.
📝 Printable Tips for the Best Coloring Experience
- Use heavier paper (32 lb. or cardstock) for bold flower outlines with no bleed-through, especially with markers.
- Color the center first then work outward petal by petal so the bloom stays neat and even.
- Blend two shades on each petal — a darker tone at the base fading to lighter at the tip for a realistic look.
- Print a few copies so kids can try the same flower in different color schemes.
- Save favorites in a folder to build a personal flower coloring book over time.