On this page, you will find Easter chick coloring pages that are free to download or print, and they bring such a sweet spring feeling with them. There is something about fluffy little chicks, cracked eggs, and Easter details that always feels cheerful, and these pages give you an easy way to enjoy that at home or in the classroom.
This collection includes all kinds of fun designs, from simple baby chicks for younger kids to more detailed pages with baskets, flowers, bows, and patterned eggs. Some are cute and playful, while others have a softer seasonal look, so you can pick the ones that fit your mood and start coloring right away.
Free Printable Easter Chick Coloring Pages
To get started, click on any of the images or links below to open the PDF file in a new tab. From there, you can download, print, or use these free printable Easter chick coloring pages for digital coloring on a tablet if that is more your style.
All of the sheets are made to fit A4 paper size, and they also print nicely on standard US letter paper. That makes them easy to use at home, at school, or anywhere you want a quick Easter activity without any fuss.
5 Fresh Ideas for Using Easter Chick Coloring Pages in Crafts
Once you finish coloring, there is still plenty you can do with the pages besides hanging them on the fridge. These craft ideas are simple, fun, and great for kids, and a few of them honestly make charming Easter decorations too.
1. Easter Basket Tags
This is one of the easiest ways to turn finished Easter chick coloring pages into something useful. Have the kids color one or two chicks, especially ones with big open spaces and clear outlines, and then cut them out carefully. If you want the tags to last longer, glue the cutouts to cardstock or thin cardboard before trimming the edges again.
Once the shapes are ready, punch a hole at the top and thread ribbon, yarn, or baker’s twine through each one. Then write names on the back or on a small paper label attached to the front. These look especially cute tied onto Easter baskets, treat bags, or even small gift boxes for spring parties.
You can also add tiny extras like cotton balls for fluffy feathers, glitter glue around the eggshell, or a little bow near the chick’s neck. It is a small craft, but it feels personal, and that usually makes it more fun for children.
2. Cracked Egg Window Decor
For this craft, choose an Easter chick coloring page where the chick is popping out of an egg, or cut an egg shape separately from white construction paper. After the page is colored, cut out the chick and the egg pieces, then glue everything onto a sheet of light cardboard or poster paper to make the design more stable.
Next, cut a large window shape from clear contact paper or laminate the finished design if you have the supplies. The chick can go in the center, and around it you can place tissue paper flowers, green paper grass, and little pastel egg shapes. When sunlight comes through the window, the whole thing gets a bright spring look that feels cheerful without taking much effort.
If you are making several, they can line a classroom window or a kitchen door. We think this one works especially well because Easter chick coloring pages already have that light, happy feel, so they fit window art naturally.
A strip of removable tape or a suction cup hook is enough to hang them. Simple idea, nice result.
3. Spring Table Place Cards
If you are setting up an Easter meal, brunch, or family get-together, these coloring pages can become lovely place cards. Start by picking smaller chick designs or trimming larger ones down so they fit neatly beside a plate. Once they are colored, fold a strip of cardstock into a tent shape and glue the chick to the front.
Write each guest’s name below the chick, or print the names on little labels if you want a cleaner look. Kids usually enjoy helping with this because every place card ends up a little different, and that handmade touch makes the table feel warmer and less stiff.
You can keep them plain, or add tiny paper flowers, stickers, ribbon, or pastel pom-poms to match the rest of your Easter table. A chick with a yellow body and a soft pink egg can look surprisingly pretty next to napkins and treats.
After the meal, guests can even take them home as keepsakes. That part feels small, but people do tend to remember details like that.
4. Easter Chick Garland
This craft works well when you have several finished pages and want to use more than one at once. Have the children color multiple Easter chicks in different shades, then cut them out and glue each one onto a backing made from cardstock. That extra layer helps the garland hold its shape and keeps the pages from bending too much when hung up.
After that, punch two small holes near the top of each piece and string them together with ribbon, yarn, or thin twine. You can place paper eggs, flowers, carrots, or green grass shapes between the chicks to make the whole garland feel fuller and more festive.
It looks great across a mantel, window, bulletin board, or doorway. If you want a softer look, use pastel ribbon. If you want something brighter for kids, mix in bold spring colors and add stickers or glitter details.
The nice thing about this project is that it can be as simple or as decorative as you want. Even a basic version still looks fun, and a line of smiling little chicks is hard to dislike.
5. Mini Easter Story Book
This idea is great for children who like crafts and pretend play together. Pick several Easter chick coloring pages with different poses or scenes, then color them and arrange them in an order that feels like a little story. One page can show the chick inside the egg, another can show it hatching, and another can place it in a basket, garden, or egg hunt scene.
Glue each finished page onto folded construction paper or plain printer paper, keeping one design per page. Then staple the pages together along one side to make a mini book. On each page, add one or two simple lines of text underneath the image so the child creates a spring story to go with the art.
You can keep the writing very short, which is often best. Something like “Peep woke up on Easter morning” or “The little chick found the brightest egg in the garden” works perfectly. It gives the craft a creative side without making it feel like homework.
This one is especially nice for classrooms, rainy afternoons, or quiet holiday time at home. And once the book is finished, kids usually want to read it right away, which is part of the fun.
There are so many fun ways to enjoy Easter chick coloring pages once the coloring is done.




























