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Luigi Coloring Pages (Free Printable PDFs)

Everyone always roots for the main guy but honestly the anxious younger brother is so much more relatable. My middle child basically lives in a constant state of mild panic over spiders and loud noises.

So I told the design team we needed a massive batch of Luigi coloring pages right away. Because sometimes you just need to celebrate the underdog who is visibly terrified but still shows up. It just feels right.

You can just grab whichever ones you want from the giant grid down below. Hit print and let them color while you maybe finally eat a meal that isn’t lukewarm chicken nuggets.

These Luigi coloring pages for kids are basically my secret weapon for surviving rainy Tuesdays.

Your kids will also love: Mario, Yoshi, Rosalina, Bowser, Princess Peach, Koopa Troopa.

Highlighted Luigi Coloring Pages

Doing a High Scissor Kick Jump

This is him doing that classic weird leg flutter jump up in the air. The illustrators included those little retro hills and some mushrooms in the background. My oldest boy always colors those hills a weird neon orange.

The clouds are super puffy and easy for little hands to fill in. Just a really solid option for a quiet afternoon.

Pointing Dramatically in Victory

He finally gets a moment to shine without his brother hogging the spotlight. He is standing proudly pointing a finger up with stars floating everywhere around him.

Kids can practice staying inside the lines with those sharp pointy stars. We always try to include empowering Luigi coloring pages for kids in the mix.

Falling Backward Spooked by a Spider

This is peak anxious brother energy right here. He is literally falling backwards off a tiny stool because a fat spider dropped from the ceiling.

I think I relate to this specific drawing on a very deep emotional level. The little window and potted plant give this Luigi coloring sheet a nice cozy room vibe.

Digging Frantically Through the Sand

He looks completely confused while digging a giant hole on the beach with a shovel. You can see palm trees and a cute little sand bucket resting in the back.

Finding a good tan crayon for all that flying sand is always a weird struggle. It is one of the more detailed images we offer.

Ground Pounding a Block

Sometimes you just have to smash something heavy. He is doing a fierce ground pound right onto a square block with his mouth wide open yelling.

The block has nice straight edges for older kids to trace over carefully. It adds some nice action to your stack of printable Luigi coloring pages .

Peeking Nervously From a Barrel

Running away and hiding in a wooden barrel is a completely valid survival strategy. He is gripping the edges tightly and just peeking his eyes out looking totally stressed.

Coloring all that wood grain takes around 14 or 15 minutes if they focus. Will they actually focus? No idea. But today it works.

Panicking While Holding a Bomb

Someone handed him a giant round bomb and he is visibly sweating bullets. The fuse is lit and he is just standing there frozen in pure panic.

You can use a cool dark grey for the bomb to make it look incredibly heavy. It is a really funny Luigi coloring pages for kids choice when they need a quick laugh.

Leaping High Off Yoshi

He is jumping right off Yoshi’s back to reach a star floating high up in the sky. Yoshi looks adorable just standing down there on the grass.

Figuring out the right green for Yoshi is basically a competitive sport in our house. This Luigi coloring sheet always gets printed twice because they fight over it.

Tips for Coloring Luigi Coloring Sheets

1. Finding the Right Green

His hat and shirt are green but it isn’t a dark forest green. If you use a dark green he just looks muddy and sad. It ruins the whole retro video game aesthetic completely.

Try mixing a bright grass green with a tiny bit of yellow crayon. It gives him that bright plastic look. This decision is let’s say not the most obvious. Or rather it is absolutely counter-intuitive but it makes the outfit pop.

2. Shading the Denim Overalls

Navy blue markers will completely obliterate the buttons and pocket lines our team drew. I see it happen around 82 percent of the time at my kitchen table. The ink just bleeds heavily into the paper.

Lightly shade it with a regular blue colored pencil instead. Then go over the edges a little harder to create a shadow effect. It grounds the abstraction of cartoon clothes into the physical world. It makes the denim look like actual heavy fabric.

3. Making the Sweat Drops Pop

He is terrified constantly so he always has these little sweat drops flying off his face. If you leave them white they just look like weird blank holes in the sky. Kids usually ignore them entirely.

Trace the outline of the sweat drops with a very light blue pen. It gives the illusion of actual wet water. And what follows from this? A much more dynamic and professional looking page.

4. Nailing Yoshi’s Colors

Yoshi is tricky because he has that big white patch on his belly and cheeks. Kids always want to color the entire dinosaur solid green. It takes some serious self control to leave those spots blank.

Outline the white areas with a dull grey pencil first. Then fill in the rest with a vibrant lime green. All this coloring logic comes down to one thing: don’t overcomplicate the simple shapes.

5. Giving the Stars a Fake Glow

There are lots of power stars floating around in these images. A flat yellow crayon is fine but perhaps it might cause some inconvenience if you want them to look magical. They end up looking like flat pieces of cheese.

Put a tiny dot of orange in the very center of the star and blend it outward. It creates a fake glowing effect that looks really cool. Just a little trick from my old teaching days.

6. Texturing the Dirt Paths

Coloring massive stretches of ground brown is just boring. The kids will absolutely quit halfway through and leave it messy. Then you have half finished free Luigi coloring pages littering the floor.

Instead of coloring the whole thing solid just draw tiny brown dashes everywhere. It looks like dirt texture without doing all the exhausting work. Sometimes skipping the hard parts is the smartest move.

7. Giving the Work Boots Weight

His shoes are these big heavy brown work boots. Most standard crayon boxes only have one terrible shade of brown that looks like mud. It is a struggle.

Try layering orange under the brown to warm it up. It makes the leather look worn and soft. It is a tiny detail for a printable Luigi coloring pages sheet but honestly it matters.

8. Shading Wooden Barrels

When he is hiding in that barrel the wood grain lines are very distinct. Do not just scribble dark brown over the entire thing. You will lose all the hard work the illustrators put into it.

Trace the grain lines with your darkest brown pencil first. Then lightly color the rest of the planks with a tan or yellow hue. It makes the barrel look 3D on a flat piece of paper. Will this work tomorrow? No idea. But today – it works.