Star Coloring Pages
12 free printable pages · print at home or color online
Star Constellation Map
Easy Toddler Star
Star and Crescent Moon
Twinkling Sparkle Star
Big Star Close-Up
Star Cluster Bunch
Starry Night Sky Scene
Starburst Pattern
Wishing Shooting Star
Smiling Cute Star
Classic Five-Point Star
The star is one of the first shapes children learn to draw, which makes star coloring pages the perfect mix of familiar and magical. Our free collection runs from a single bold five-pointed star and a wish-granting shooting star to busy night skies, neat star clusters, and intricate star mandalas for steady older hands. As kids color, they practice staying inside crisp outlines and learn fun facts along the way — that the twinkle of a star is its light bending through our atmosphere, that the Sun is our own nearest star, and that the shapes we connect into constellations are really stars sitting huge distances apart. Some pages use big, chunky shapes for little hands, while others layer points, swirls, and patterns for kids who want more to fill in. Print as many as you like — they're free, need no sign-up, and are ready the moment you are.
🖨️ How-To Guide: Download & Print Your Star Coloring Pages
- Pick your stars: Scroll the collection and choose your favorites — 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 it twinkle!
⭐ Activity Ideas Using Star Coloring Pages
- Make a Wish Star: Color a shooting star, then have kids write or draw a wish on the back before taping it above their bed.
- Bedroom Constellation Wall: Color several star pages, cut them out, and arrange them on a wall to build your own glowing night sky.
- Reward Star Chart: Print a sheet of stars and color one in each time a chore or good deed gets done — a colorful behavior tracker.
- Glitter Star Ornaments: Color a star, brush on a little glue and glitter, then hang it in a window so it catches the light.
- Spot the Constellation: After coloring a night-sky page, head outside on a clear evening and try to find the Big Dipper or the North Star.
📝 Printable Tips for the Best Coloring Experience
- Use heavier paper (32 lb. or cardstock) for bold star outlines with no bleed-through.
- Yellows, golds, and silvers make stars glow — but encourage rainbow stars too; nobody says they must be one color!
- Color the points last fill the center of each star first, then sweep outward so the tips stay sharp and neat.
- Print a few copies so kids can try the same star in different color schemes.
- Save favorites in a folder to build a personal star coloring book over time.