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Sandy Cheeks Coloring Pages (Free Printable PDFs)

Sometimes I wonder how a squirrel manages to be the most athletic creature at the bottom of the ocean.

My boys were literally bouncing off the couch cushions yesterday, pretending to do karate in imaginary air helmets while completely destroying the living room. It was exhausting just watching them.

So I marched right over to my team and told them we needed some Sandy Cheeks coloring pages fast. It was purely an act of desperate self-preservation.

You don’t have to navigate a dangerous treedome to find these. Just click on any of the thumbnails below to grab your printable Sandy Cheeks coloring pages.

Print out 8 or 9 copies and toss some markers on the kitchen table. It might buy you enough time to drink half a cup of lukewarm coffee.

Your kids will also love: SpongeBob, Patrick Star, Squidward, Mr Krabs.

Sandy Cheeks Coloring Page Highlights

Launching Straight Into Space

Here she is blasting off with rockets attached to her boots. The moon and stars in the background give it this sci-fi feel that my kids absolutely love. You get to color the actual flames shooting out.

Finding good Sandy coloring pages with action scenes is usually a nightmare. This one is perfect for breaking out the orange and yellow crayons.

Exhausted by the Rock

We all hit that midday slump where we just want to collapse against a boulder. She looks completely drained with her tongue hanging out next to some coral. Honestly I felt exactly like this after the school run on Tuesday.

The details on her space suit are clear in this Sandy Cheeks coloring sheet. Kids can practice shading the glass of her helmet without getting frustrated.

Swinging From a Tree Branch

My youngest daughter is obsessed with climbing everything right now. So seeing Sandy swinging gracefully from a rope really caught her attention. The team added some nice textured coral and seaweed at the bottom.

It is one of those free Sandy Cheeks coloring pages that feels genuinely dynamic. You can practically hear her yelling some wild Texas catchphrase as she swings.

Lifting a Massive Anchor

Texas squirrels are built different I guess. She is casually hauling up a heavy anchor like it weighs nothing at all. The little beads of sweat on her helmet are a hilarious touch.

Coloring metal is a great way to teach kids about highlights. Leave a little white streak on the anchor and it suddenly looks heavy and real.

Planting the Texas Flag

You can take the squirrel out of Texas but you know the rest… She is proudly jamming a star flag into the ground right under the ocean. My boys spent a solid 22 minutes arguing over what color the flag should be.

This is honestly one of our best printable Sandy Cheeks coloring pages . The contrast between the rigid flag and the soft plants is just fun to look at.

Sliding Under a Heavy Door

This looks like a scene straight out of a spy movie. She is sliding fast under a metal door that is dropping down. I think it is supposed to be the entrance to her laboratory.

The mechanical details on the walls take a bit of focus to color. These kinds of Sandy Cheeks coloring pages for kids are brilliant for keeping older siblings busy.

Surfing a Massive Wave

Just casually shredding a wave in a diving suit. The water lines curving around her surfboard give a really intense sense of speed. And what follows from this? A desperate hunt for the blue crayon.

Grab about four different shades of blue for that water. It is a fantastic free Sandy Cheeks coloring pages option for a rainy weekend indoors.

A Proud Close-up Portrait

Sometimes you just need a character portrait without too much chaos. She has this goofy smile right in the center of her glass dome. The little bubbles floating up behind her are oddly calming to fill in.

It is a really solid Sandy Cheeks coloring sheet for toddlers who are just learning to stay inside the lines. The spaces are big and the drawing is super forgiving.

Tips for Coloring Sandy Cheeks Coloring Sheets

1. Getting the Glass Helmet Right

Her diving helmet is essentially a giant fishbowl on her head. If your kid just leaves it blank paper white it looks totally unfinished. But coloring the whole thing solid blue makes her face disappear.

I usually teach my kids to just trace the inside edge with a blue pencil. Then add one or two angled white lines to look like a glare from the sun. This simple trick elevates any Sandy coloring pages almost instantly. It might cause some inconvenience if they press too hard though.

2. Mixing the Perfect Squirrel Fur

She is a squirrel so obviously she is brown. But standard brown crayons are usually way too dark for her cartoon fur. She actually has a very warm color in the show.

Try lightly laying down a layer of orange before you use a brown. It gives the fur that warm sun-baked glow. Finding the right fur color makes these Sandy Cheeks coloring pages for kids look so much more accurate.

3. Making That Pink Flower Pop

She always has that weird flower glued to the outside of her helmet. It is such a strange detail but it absolutely has to be there. Most kids just hit it with a pink marker and move on.

But if you want it to look cool use a yellow center and a lighter pink for the petals. Then take a red pencil and draw tiny lines radiating out from the middle. It adds a surprising amount of detail to a basic drawing.

4. Shading a White Space Suit

Her entire outfit is basically just a white suit. Leaving it completely blank is technically accurate but incredibly boring to look at. White objects in art still have shadows. It is like trying to draw a cloud.

Take a dull pencil and lightly shade under her arms and chin. It gives the suit volume so she looks 3D instead of flat. This is how you make a printout look like a professional piece of art.

5. Metal Details on the Suit

There is a metal zipper running down the front of her suit which usually gets swallowed up by messy scribbles when they color too fast. Plus she has that little acorn badge on her chest. I see it happen every single day.

Tell your kids to leave those specific spots blank until the very end. Then use a silver pencil to carefully fill them in. It requires a bit of fine motor control which is secretly great practice for them.

6. Dealing with Ocean Backgrounds

She lives underwater but she is from Texas. It is a hilarious contradiction. Coloring a massive sheet of solid blue water is pure torture for a 6-year-old.

Use watercolor paints for the background instead of crayons or markers. A quick watercolor wash over the background saves time and looks exactly like the ocean. The wax from the crayons will resist the paint anyway.

7. Coloring the Heavy Boots

She wears these heavy boots with red circles on the sides to keep her walking on the ocean floor. Finding the right shade of grey in a messy crayon box is a chore. Around 90 percent of the time we just settle for black. Or rather we just use whatever dull pencil is closest to the floor.

If you only have a black crayon just press really lightly to make a makeshift grey. Make sure that red circle on the ankle really stands out brightly. It anchors the whole design of her wacky outfit.

8. Don’t Ignore the Action Lines

Because she knows karate she is always jumping or kicking or chopping something. The illustrators draw these little curved lines near her hands and feet to show movement. My boys usually think they are just stray marks and ignore them.

I always suggest tracing those action lines with a bright color like yellow or orange. It makes her look like she is moving fast across the paper. Will they actually listen to this advice? Probably not but today it works.