On this page, you will find 84 Easter coloring pages that are free to download and print, and they are a lovely way to bring a bit of springtime fun into your day. Easter always has a warm feeling around it, with baskets, eggs, bunnies, flowers, and soft pastel colors, so these pages feel especially nice for quiet time at home, in the classroom, or around the kitchen table.
This collection includes many different Easter-themed designs, from decorated eggs and fluffy chicks to happy rabbits, baskets, crosses, flowers, and festive spring scenes. Some pages are simple and easy for younger kids, while others have more detail for older children or adults who want a calm and creative break. It is the kind of activity that feels cheerful without needing much at all, and that is part of the charm.
Free Printable Easter Coloring Pages
To get started, click on any of the images or links below to open the PDF file in a new tab, where you can download, print, or color the sheet digitally. These free printable Easter coloring pages are easy to use, so you can pick your favorites and start right away without any fuss.
All pages are set up to print clearly on A4 paper, and they also fit nicely on standard US letter paper sizes. That makes them handy whether you are printing at home, using them in school, or putting together a small Easter activity pack for family or friends.
5 Smart Ideas to Repurpose Easter Coloring Pages
Here are five fun and easy ways to turn finished Easter coloring sheets into simple crafts you can actually use. A plain coloring page is already enjoyable on its own, but once you start cutting, folding, hanging, and decorating it, the whole thing becomes even more memorable.
1. Easter Basket Gift Tags
One of the easiest ways to use finished coloring pages is to turn them into gift tags for Easter baskets. After the page is colored, you can cut out small shapes like eggs, bunnies, chicks, or flowers and glue them onto thicker cardstock so they hold their shape better. Once that is done, punch a small hole at the top and thread ribbon, string, or even yarn through it.
You can write a name or short note on the back, which makes each tag feel personal without much extra effort. This works especially well if you are putting together baskets for several children and want each one to look a little different.
What makes this craft so nice is that it uses even small parts of the page, so nothing has to go to waste. A bright little tag tied onto a chocolate box or a basket handle always looks charming, and it adds that handmade touch people tend to remember.
2. Window Sun Catcher Decorations
For this craft, choose parts of the Easter coloring page that have bold outlines and cheerful shapes, such as large eggs, spring flowers, or bunny faces. After coloring them, cut them out carefully and glue them onto clear contact paper or laminate them if you want them to last longer. You can also trim around the edges to keep the shapes neat and clean.
Next, attach a loop of string or ribbon to the top, or simply tape them to a window. When the light comes through, the colors stand out in such a pretty way. It is a very simple idea, but it changes the feeling of a room fast, especially during spring when the sunlight starts to feel softer and brighter again.
You can make one large decoration or several smaller ones and group them together across a window. That usually looks better than people expect. A row of colorful Easter shapes hanging in the light can make the whole space feel festive without looking overdone.
This is also a good option for classrooms or family gatherings because it does not need expensive supplies. Just paper, scissors, and something clear to hold the art together, and you are already most of the way there.
3. Easter Story Cards
This idea works well if you want a craft that feels creative but also gives children something to do afterward. Start by coloring several different Easter pages, then cut out the main characters or objects from each one. You might use a bunny from one page, eggs from another, a basket from a third, and flowers or chicks from the rest.
Glue each cutout onto a separate piece of cardstock to create a set of picture cards. Once the cards are ready, children can arrange them in different orders and make up little Easter stories with them. Some will make funny stories, some will make sweet ones, and some will be wonderfully odd, which is often the best part.
You can even write simple prompts on the back, such as “What did the bunny find?” or “Where is the basket going?” That helps if a child wants a starting point. It turns coloring into a mix of art, imagination, and storytelling, and that gives the pages a lot more life than just hanging them on the fridge.
4. Handmade Easter Placemats
If you want a craft that is useful right away, placemats are a great pick. Choose a full Easter coloring page with a balanced layout, color it in, and then glue it onto a sheet of thin cardboard or heavy construction paper. After that, cover the front with clear contact paper or laminate it so it can handle crumbs, spills, and a bit of wear.
These homemade placemats look lovely on an Easter breakfast or lunch table, especially if each person colors their own. No two will look exactly alike, and that is what makes the table feel relaxed and welcoming instead of too formal.
You can add names, little borders, or extra drawings before sealing them, and that helps each mat feel finished. For younger kids, this can be one of those crafts they are genuinely proud to use, because they get to see their artwork become part of the celebration itself.
They also store flat, which is handy. You can bring them out each Easter, and that small tradition can become surprisingly meaningful over time.
5. Spring Garland With Easter Cutouts
A spring garland is one of the prettiest ways to reuse colored pages, and it is much simpler than it sounds. After the coloring pages are finished, cut out several shapes, such as eggs, rabbits, chicks, crosses, tulips, or baskets. Then tape or glue them onto a long piece of string, ribbon, or twine, leaving a bit of space between each one so the garland does not feel crowded.
You can hang it across a mantel, bookshelf, doorway, wall, or party table. If you use shapes in different sizes, the finished piece looks more playful and lively. That little variety really helps. A garland with all the same shape can still be cute, but mixed pieces usually have more personality.
If you want it to feel fuller, add paper bows, pom-poms, or folded tissue paper flowers between the cutouts. That gives it texture and makes it look more like a decoration you bought somewhere, even though it started with a simple coloring sheet.
This one is especially good for groups because each person can contribute a few pieces, and then everything comes together in one display. It feels cheerful, handmade, and very Easter in the best way.
There are so many fun ways to enjoy Easter coloring pages, and sometimes the simplest crafts turn out to be the ones you remember most.




















































































