On this page, you will find 43 original Garfield coloring pages that are all free to download or print, and they cover everything we love about that grumpy orange cat. If you have ever laughed at Garfield’s face when Monday shows up, you already get the vibe, and you are going to have a lot of fun with these.
We put this set together with a mix of simple pages for quick wins and more detailed ones for slow, cozy coloring sessions. You will spot lasagna moments, lazy naps, and plenty of side-eye, plus a few scenes with Odie and Jon that feel like classic comic-strip energy.
Free Printable Garfield Coloring Pages
To get started, click on any image or link below, and it will open the PDF in a new tab with the free printable Garfield coloring pages ready to go. From there, you can download them, print them at home, or even color them on a tablet if you prefer a mess-free option.
Each sheet fits neatly on A4 paper, and the PDF format keeps the lines crisp so your markers, crayons, or pencils look clean. If your printer settings try to zoom in, set it to “fit” or “actual size,” and you should be good.
5 Smart Ideas to Repurpose Garfield Coloring Pages
If you are like us, you will finish a page and think, “This is too good to just toss in a folder.” Try a few of these simple projects, because they turn finished art into stuff you can actually use around the house.
1. Garfield Corner Bookmark With a Big Attitude
Pick a Garfield face that has the best “do not bother me” look, then color it with bold shades so it pops on the page. Cut the face out, but leave a little extra paper around the edges so it does not tear too easily when you handle it.
Fold a small square of cardstock into a corner bookmark shape, then glue your colored Garfield on the front like he is peeking over your book. If you want it to last, cover the front with clear tape or a self-adhesive laminate sheet, and press it flat with a ruler so you do not get bubbles.
This one feels extra fun in cookbooks, which is funny because Garfield would approve of any book that leads to food. You can also make a few and stash them in different books, so Garfield “judges” your reading choices in every room.
2. A “No Mondays” Door Hanger Sign
Choose a full-body Garfield page, color it, and cut him out carefully, especially around the paws and tail. Then grab a strip of sturdy cardboard or thick cardstock and cut it into a door-hanger shape with a hole at the top that fits your door handle.
Glue Garfield onto the hanger and add a simple message with a marker, like “Do Not Disturb” or “No Mondays,” and keep the words big so they read from a few steps away. If you want a cleaner look, write the text on a separate piece of paper, cut it out, and glue it on like a label.
Seal it with clear tape or a brush-on glue sealer, because doors get bumped and hands get curious. This is a fun one for a bedroom, but it also works for a home office when you need quiet time and you want a sign that makes people smile.
3. Lasagna Recipe Card Set With Garfield Art
Find any Garfield page that features food vibes, or just pick one where he looks extra pleased, because that fits the theme. Color and cut out a small section, like Garfield’s head, a paw, or a tiny lasagna detail, and keep it about the size of a playing card.
Glue the cutout onto blank index cards or trimmed cardstock, then write your favorite recipes on the back. You can do real lasagna recipes, quick snacks, or “Monday survival” meals, and that contrast always gets a laugh when you flip through them later.
If you plan to actually use these in the kitchen, protect them with tape or laminate sheets so sauce and fingerprints do not ruin your work. Stack them in a little box, tie them with string, or punch a hole and put them on a ring, and you will have a recipe set that feels personal instead of plain.
4. Comic-Style Wall Collage With Matching Colors
Color three to six different Garfield pages, but keep one color rule across all of them, like the same orange for Garfield and the same light background shade. That small trick makes the whole collage look intentional, even if the pages are totally different scenes.
Trim the white borders to the same width, then mount each page on a slightly larger sheet of colored paper so it looks like a frame. Arrange them on the floor first, because spacing matters more than people think, and it is easier to move paper around than to fix wall holes.
Use removable wall strips if you rent, or put them in inexpensive frames if you want a cleaner finish. This looks great in a playroom, a reading corner, or anywhere you want a bit of humor on the wall without it feeling loud.
5. Garfield Gift Wrap Panels for Small Presents
This one works best when you have a finished page you love, but it does not fit as “wall art,” or you have a few practice pages. Color the page, then cut it into panels that match the size of your small gift box, like rectangles for the sides and a bigger piece for the top.
Tape the panels onto the box like a patchwork wrap, and keep the tape on the inside edges so the outside looks neat. If you want to level it up, add a simple ribbon and a little tag made from a leftover Garfield face, and suddenly the wrapping becomes part of the gift.
Kids tend to keep these boxes, which is a nice surprise, and adults usually laugh when they see Garfield “guarding” the present. It feels playful, it uses what you already made, and it saves you from buying fancy wrapping paper for small stuff.
Have fun with your Garfield coloring pages and keep the ones you love where you can actually see them.











































