The Best Fluffy Pancakes recipe you will fall in love with. Full of tips and tricks to help you make the best pancakes.
These penguin pages bring in snowy details without feeling cold: scarves, ice, snowflakes, winter stars, baby penguins, and cozy little poses. They are a natural pick for winter themes or polar animal activities.
Each thumbnail links to its own printable PDF. With 58 pages in the set, it is easy to pick a single design for today or print several pages for a coloring folder.
- 58 free printable PDF coloring pages
- Designed for US Letter or A4 printing
- Good for crayons, colored pencils, markers, and gel pens
- Useful for home, classrooms, parties, quiet time, and simple crafts
For extra help choosing colors for fur, feathers, shells, or tiny background details, the how to color kawaii guide has simple palette and shading tips. If you want the style explained more broadly, start with what kawaii means and how those cute rounded shapes work.
What makes this set fun to color
Penguins on ice, scarves, snowflakes, winter stars, little igloo-like backgrounds, and baby penguin poses. Because the pages are not all doing the exact same thing, the set works for mixed ages. Younger kids can stay with the big shapes, while older kids can use the tiny details for shading, patterns, and color experiments.
Color ideas from the pages
Charcoal, white belly shapes, icy blue, scarf red or teal, pale lavender shadows, and silver-gray snow. For a softer kawaii finish, keep the cheeks and eye highlights light, then use your strongest colors on the details you want people to notice first.
Color the scarf first, then repeat that accent color in stars or snowflakes to tie the page together.
A simple way to use the finished pages
These are easy winter printables for classrooms, snow days, or a cozy polar animal display. You can also trim a finished page into a notebook cover, paste the main character onto cardstock, or write a tiny story beside the picture before displaying it.
Printing tips
Open the PDF from the thumbnail and print at actual size. Copy paper is fine for crayons and colored pencils; use a slightly heavier sheet if children will use markers or if you plan to cut out the finished artwork. If the page has lots of small details, printing one test copy first can save ink and paper.
More pages that fit this mood
If this set matches the kind of cute artwork you were looking for, these related pages are worth opening next:







