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Strawberry Coloring Pages (Free Printable PDFs)

We burn through baskets of fresh berries in this house faster than I can wash them. It is honestly ridiculous how much fruit three kids can eat.

I figured if we are constantly snacking on them, we might as well have some strawberry coloring pages to match the mood. Our drew up these coloring pages to capture that sticky summer vibe without the actual juice stains on my couch.

Scrolling down you will spot the whole patch of our new designs. Just click any thumbnail to open up a printable strawberry coloring page PDF and you are good to go.

I highly recommend keeping some 80 lb cardstock around because a standard coloring sheet just disintegrates when little hands go heavy on the markers.

Featured Strawberry Coloring Pages

Highlighted Strawberry Coloring Pages

Strawberry Jam Jar

This one features a single berry sitting right next to a glass jar of jam. The little label on the jar is so cute. There is even a tiny fence and some puffy clouds in the background.

Sam is five and he thinks jam just magically appears in the fridge. I try to explain it comes from fruit but he just looks at me like I am crazy. This coloring page of a strawberry is a good excuse to talk about how things are made.

Sweet Sugar Dip

Here we have a giant berry resting next to a pile of sugar. Or maybe it’s salt . . . no, definitely sugar. There are some lovely vines in the back.

Dipping fruit in raw sugar is a total childhood memory for me. I don’t let my kids do it because they get hyper enough as it is. But they can definitely color this free strawberry coloring pages design all they want.

Resting on a Napkin

A perfectly ripe berry is just chilling on a folded napkin. We put it on a wooden table with some leafy branches hanging down from the top. It feels very quiet.

My tween daughter loves the aesthetic of this one. She says it looks like a picnic she saw on TikTok. I just like that the lines are bold enough for younger kids to stay inside.

Fancy Teacup Berry

The filename said porcelain bowl but let’s be real, it is totally a teacup on a saucer. The strawberry is just sitting right inside it. The floral background makes it feel super vintage.

We do fake tea parties sometimes. My middle kid brings his Mario Kart toys to the table and we drink apple juice from tiny cups. This printable strawberry coloring pages download fits right into that weird little world.

Hollow of a Spoon

We drew this strawberry sitting perfectly in the bowl of a spoon. It is completely surrounded by these little floating leaves and flower buds. It has a very botanical vibe to it.

Shading the metallic curve of the spoon is actually a really fun challenge. You can leave a white streak down the side to make it look shiny. It is a great way to sneak a tiny art lesson into a random Tuesday.

Beachside Drink

Nothing says vacation like a tall glass with a berry perched on the rim. The background has an ocean view with some waves and a beach. There are even little clouds floating by.

I desperately need a real beach day right now. Until that happens I will just live vicariously through this strawberry coloring sheet. Honestly I might print this one out for myself after the kids go to sleep.

One Tiny Bite

Somebody took a bite right out of the side of this berry. It is sitting in a patch of leaves and little strawberry flowers. The seeds are drawn nice and big.

Sam always tries to claim he didn’t eat the snacks when he literally has juice on his chin. This reminds me of his half-eaten apples scattered around the house. It is a really fun texture to color in where the bite mark is.

Hulled Berry

This is just a massive strawberry with the leafy top completely removed. Just the little indent left behind at the top. It is framed by a border of twisting vines.

Prepping fruit for three kids takes forever. I spend half my morning just pulling the green tops off berries. I think any parent will look at this coloring page of a strawberry and feel a deep sense of shared exhaustion.

Tips for Coloring Strawberry Pages

1. Layer Your Reds

Red crayons can be tricky. If you just press down hard with one standard red, the whole thing looks lifeless. I always tell the kids to start light. Then you come back in with a darker crimson or even a magenta around the edges.

It makes the fruit look juicy instead of like a plastic toy. Will this trick work tomorrow when they are grumpy? No idea. But today it works. Give it a try and see what happens.

2. Don’t Ignore the Seeds

Most people just color right over the seeds. Don’t do that. Leave them white or grab a tiny yellow pencil.

If you want to get really crazy, put a tiny dot of brown right under each seed. It creates a shadow. It makes the seed pop out off the page like it’s 3D. Sam doesn’t have the patience for this, but my older daughter loves doing it.

3. Mix Up the Greens

The leafy tops need love too. Nature is messy. Leaves aren’t just one color from a factory.

Use a bright green for the new leaves in the center. Then use a forest green for the older leaves on the outside. Smudge them together a bit. It adds instant depth without much effort.

4. Ditch the Printer Paper

Cheap paper ruins good art. It just does. If you are using markers, regular copy paper is going to pill up and tear into a soggy mess. I hate seeing kids get upset over ripped paper.

I always stock 80 lb cardstock. It holds the ink. It feels sturdy in your hands. When you print these strawberry coloring pages for kids on good paper, it feels like a real activity and not just busywork.

5. Leave the Shine

Fruit has a natural gloss to it. If you want it to look wet and fresh, you have to leave some white space. Don’t color every single square inch. It takes restraint.

Draw a little curved oval near the top of the berry before you start. Protect that spot with your life. Leave it completely blank. It acts like a highlight and tricks the eye into seeing a shiny surface.

6. Soften the Background

A lot of these pages have heavy backgrounds with leaves and jars. Don’t let the background fight the main subject. The strawberry is the star. Keep the focus where it belongs.

I like to use colored pencils for the background and markers for the main fruit. The contrast in textures looks amazing. The softer pencil strokes let the bold marker colors punch right through. It’s a solid strategy.

7. Embrace the Weird

Who says a strawberry has to be red? Nobody. Sometimes my kids want to make alien fruit. I spent like 43 minutes trying to convince Sam otherwise once, but I gave up.

A neon blue berry with purple seeds? Why not. A galaxy pattern? Go for it. The rules go out the window when we sit down at the craft table. It is just paper, so let them ruin it if they want to.

8. Hide Your Marker Lines

Kids get frustrated when their markers leave those overlapping streaks. It looks messy. But you can actually use that to your advantage. Seriously.

Make all your marker strokes curve around the shape of the berry. Think of it like wrapping a string around a ball. It hides the messy lines and makes the fruit look rounder. All this math comes down to one thing: don’t overcomplicate it.