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Gudetama Coloring Pages (Free Printable PDFs)

Some days I completely understand this lazy egg. The sheer exhaustion of keeping three humans alive makes me want to pull a bacon blanket over my head and ignore the world.

My kids somehow find that hilarious and started asking for free Gudetama coloring pages to decorate the fridge. So we started sketching out these weird little breakfast scenes. Honestly it felt like a weird fever dream drawing an egg with a butt.

It turns out drawing a depressed yolk is actually pretty therapeutic. You don’t have to overthink the shading or worry about perfect anatomical proportions.

We made sure these printable Gudetama coloring pages were easy enough for tiny hands. Just click below and let them go nuts with the yellow crayons.

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Featured Gudetama Coloring Pages

Gudetama Coloring Page Highlights

Hiding Behind the Salt Shaker

This little guy is literally just slumped against a massive glass shaker. He spilled his own egg white everywhere which feels entirely relatable. My youngest always colors the spilled part light blue like a puddle.

There is a cute little framed picture of a fried egg on the wall behind him. I think this specific Gudetama coloring sheet is perfect for practicing glass reflections. Just leave a little white streak on the shaker.

Snoozing Under Seaweed

He is basically treating a piece of nori like a heavy winter quilt here. He looks so cozy resting on that bamboo sushi mat. You can even see cherry blossoms floating outside the round window.

Kids usually want to color the seaweed pitch black but I tell them to use dark green. It gives it that authentic snack look. You definitely need Gudetama coloring pages for kids who love Japanese food.

Dinner Plate Sleeping Bag

Look at him all zipped up in a puffy sleeping bag right on a plate. He is completely surrounded by healthy stuff like broccoli and tomatoes that he probably won’t eat. It just makes me laugh.

The texture on that sleeping bag is super fun to fill in. Try using alternating shades of orange and red for the stripes. It makes him look like a little camping caterpillar.

Soy Sauce Bath Time

Why take a normal bath when you can soak in sodium. He is chilling in a clawfoot tub with a little rubber duck sitting on a fried egg bath mat. A bottle of what I assume is more soy sauce sits on the shelf.

Filling in that dark liquid is tricky because you don’t want to lose his outline. Have them press lightly with a brown crayon. This is another of those free Gudetama coloring pages that always gets a giggle.

Limp on a Soup Spoon

Somebody is lifting him right over a bowl of steaming rice and some miso soup. He just looks completely resigned to his fate up there in the sky. There are even little sparkles and clouds floating around the spoon.

Metallic objects are always a weird challenge for kids. Tell them to use a light gray colored pencil to trace the inner bowl of the spoon. It creates a cool metal effect without much effort.

Doing Absolutely Nothing

This is the ultimate mood for a Sunday afternoon. He is just melted entirely flat on a plain round plate in a cozy kitchen. The little potted plant and dog picture on the wall add some nice homey details.

You really have to get creative with the yellow shades here. Otherwise he just blends into a massive yellow blob. I always grab this Gudetama coloring sheet when I need around 11 to 12 minutes of absolute silence.

Resting on a Rice Ball

Outdoorsy Gudetama is a rare aesthetic but here we are. He is draped over a giant onigiri right in the middle of a sunny field. The flowers and little bushes make it look like a pleasant spring day.

The rice ball takes up a huge chunk of the page. Kids can either leave it stark white or add tiny gray shadows for texture. Honestly leaving it blank is fine too.

Melting Off the Pancakes

He has basically given up and is sliding right down a massive stack of flapjacks. There is a square of butter on his head and syrup dripping everywhere. It looks like a sticky nightmare to clean up.

Your kids will probably want to color the syrup brown but try suggesting a golden yellow. It makes the whole breakfast look warmer and more appetizing. These are the best printable Gudetama coloring pages for weekend mornings.

Tips for Coloring Gudetama

1. Finding the Right Yellow

You would think any yellow crayon works. It doesn’t. Standard primary yellow looks way too harsh for a soft raw egg.

I usually dig through the bin for something called goldenrod or dandelion. Those softer warmer yellows give him that slightly cooked gooey look. It makes a huge difference honestly.

2. Shading the Egg White

The egg white is the hardest part because paper is already white. Kids usually just ignore it. Then the picture looks completely unfinished.

I teach my kids to take a very pale blue or gray colored pencil. Just trace the very edge of the squiggly white puddle. It gives it volume so it actually looks like 3D slime instead of empty space.

3. The Bacon Blanket Texture

He uses meat as a blanket a lot. Bacon is tricky because of the fat ribbons. If you just color it solid red it looks like a brick.

You want to use a dark maroon for the meat parts. Then grab a peach or light pink for the fat strips. Leave a little white space so it looks greasy and crispy.

4. Handling the Food Props

There is so much random food in these pictures. Rice, seaweed, tomatoes, pancakes. It can get overwhelming.

Don’t feel like you need to use realistic food colors every time. If your toddler wants neon purple broccoli… let them. Finding Gudetama coloring pages for kids is about having fun not passing culinary school.

5. Getting the Shadow Right

Gudetama is three-dimensional even though he acts flat. He casts a shadow on his egg white bed. Most people forget this step entirely.

Take a soft brown or tan colored pencil. Gently shade the area right underneath his yellow body. Suddenly he pops right off the page. All this shading stuff comes down to one thing: don’t overcomplicate it.

6. Metallic Background Objects

A lot of these scenes have spoons or metal spatulas. Crayons really struggle to make metal look like actual metal. It just ends up looking like dull gray wax.

We keep a stash of cheap silver gel pens exactly for this. The ink glides on smooth and leaves a shiny finish. Contrasting that hard shiny metal against the soft matte egg is a fun little sensory trick.

7. Dealing with Dark Liquids

That soy sauce bathtub is hilarious but tough to color. If you use a black marker you ruin the black outline of his body. It just turns into a dark blob.

Swap the marker for a dark brown crayon and press lightly. Or use watercolors if you are feeling brave enough for a mess. Watercolors actually make the liquid look translucent like real soy sauce.

8. Embracing the Messy Edges

My oldest used to cry if she colored outside his little black outline. It caused so much unnecessary stress. He is literally a blob of goo.

I finally told her that spilled egg is supposed to be messy anyway. So if the yellow bleeds into the white it is just part of the vibe. Sometimes breaking the rules is the only way to get through an afternoon art project.