Elephant Coloring Pages
Elephant Coloring Pages make a wide range of animal scenes easy to explore, from simple outlines to detailed decorative designs. This collection includes sleepy babies, family moments, nature settings, and playful props like balloons, books, and cupcakes. Some pages feel calm and realistic, while others lean cute, festive, or alphabet-themed. That variety makes the set appealing for both quick coloring and slower, more detailed work.

For the cleanest result, print these pages on standard white paper or a heavier sheet if you want to use markers. Set your printer to fit the image to the page so each design stays centered and easy to color. If you want to save ink, choose draft mode for the simpler outlines and reserve full quality for the more detailed pages.
Related coloring pages
Printable Elephant Coloring Pages

Elephant Coloring Page

Strawberry Elephant Coloring Page

Baby Elephant Coloring Page

Elephant Coloring Sheet

Elephant Coloring Pages Printable

Free Elephant Coloring Page

Free Printable Elephant Coloring Pages

Elephant Coloring Pages For Kids

Cute Baby Elephant Coloring Page

African Elephant Coloring Page

E Is For Elephant Coloring Page

Drunk Elephant Coloring Page

Asian Elephant Coloring Page

Elephant Mandala Coloring Page

Easy Elephant Coloring Page

Elephant Adult Coloring Page

Baby Elephant Coloring Sheet

Printable Cute Elephant Coloring Page

Kawaii Cute Elephant Coloring Page

Simple Elephant Coloring Page

Printable Cute Baby Elephant Coloring Page

Kawaii Elephant Printable

Elephant Family Coloring Sheet

Indian Elephant Coloring Page

Elephant Coloring Page

Elephant Coloring Sheets for Kids

Christmas Elephant Coloring Pages

Elephant Kids Coloring Page

Free Printable Baby Elephant Coloring Pages

Cute Easy Elephant Coloring Pages

Elephant Face Coloring Pages

Elephant Drawing Coloring Page

Animal Coloring Pages Elephant

Elephant and Giraffe Coloring Pages

Free Elephant Coloring Pages for Kids

Happy Birthday Elephant Coloring Page

Elephant Coloring Page Outline

Emily Elephant Coloring Pages

Free Printable Elephant Coloring Pages for Kids
What appears in this collection
This set of Elephant Coloring Pages includes a strong mix of styles, which makes it useful for different ages and coloring moods. Some pages are very simple, such as a clean outline with open space or a lone elephant near grass and a hill. Others add more personality with smiling faces, stars, clouds, a calm profile view, or a bold line sketch with a softer background. You will also find baby elephants in several poses, which gives the collection a friendly, gentle tone.
The variety continues with nature scenes, decorative designs, and playful props. There are elephants beside water, near trees, under a moon, and in grassland settings. Some pages include baskets, strawberries, books, crayons, a teddy bear, a birthday hat, a cupcake, a Santa hat, or a gift. That mix keeps the printable set from feeling repetitive and gives each page a slightly different mood.
Visual styles worth noticing
The artwork ranges from very open layouts to more detailed line art. A simple elephant outline is a good choice for beginners because the shapes are clear and the spaces are easy to fill. At the other end of the range, the mandala-filled elephant and the ornamental elephant with curved patterns invite slower coloring and more attention to texture. The Indian elephant with a patterned cloth and raised trunk adds another decorative option that feels richer and more intricate.
Character-style pages also stand out. The kawaii elephant with round cheeks, the friendly elephant with a bow, the smiling elephant holding a star, and the tiny elephant with a heart balloon all lean into a cute, soft look. Those pages work well with pastel color palettes, while the more realistic animals can take on earth tones, gray shades, or even bright imaginative color choices.
Elephants in nature scenes
Several pages place the animals in landscapes that suggest different habitats. An African elephant appears near acacia trees, while an Asian elephant is shown near bamboo and water. Those details help signal the contrast between broad savanna imagery and a more lush, forested setting. A standing elephant by water with birds above, a calm elephant near a watering hole, and a lone elephant in grass all add a natural wildlife feel without crowding the page.
These background elements are useful because they give the colorist more than one focal point. Trees, clouds, hills, and water can be colored lightly to frame the elephant without overpowering it. Acacia trees, in particular, suggest an African landscape, while bamboo is a familiar visual cue for Asian habitat imagery. If you want to keep the page balanced, use softer greens and blues in the background and let the animal remain the main focus.
Baby elephants and family scenes
Family imagery is one of the strongest themes in the collection. There is an adult elephant with a calf in grass, an elephant family standing together, and several baby elephant pages that show sitting, sleeping, and holding a teddy bear. Baby elephants are often called calves, and these gentle scenes highlight the social side of elephant life. The mood changes depending on the pose: a sleeping baby under the moon feels peaceful, while a baby beside a ball or holding a teddy bear feels more playful and child-friendly.
When you color family scenes, it can help to use similar tones across the group so the pages feel connected. You can still vary the shades slightly to show age, light, or distance. For a pair or family composition, keep the adults a little darker or more grounded and make the calf slightly lighter or softer for contrast.
Educational details that fit naturally
Elephants are the largest land animals on Earth, so even a simple drawing can open the door to basic animal facts. Their trunks are especially useful because they help with breathing, smelling, grasping, and drinking. Many readers also recognize that African and Asian elephants are the two living species most often discussed in basic natural history. Pages that include the letter E or an alphabet block make that connection even more direct for early learners.
These pages work best when the facts stay simple and accurate. A small elephant beside a letter is enough to support alphabet recognition, and a realistic animal near grass or water can naturally lead into a short conversation about habitat and family groups. You do not need to add extra detail for the page to feel meaningful.
Ways to color the themed pages
The prop-based designs invite a more playful approach. A cheerful elephant holding a balloon, one with a birthday hat and cupcake, or another in a Santa hat beside a gift can be colored with bright accent shades. Books, crayons, and a blank sign make some pages feel more flexible, since you can choose simple classroom colors or keep the design soft and neutral. The elephant-shaped wellness bottle with leaves is a more unusual image, and it can be shaded with fresh greens and clean outlines to emphasize the decorative concept.
For pages with strawberries, berries, hearts, bows, and stars, consider using color to separate the accessory from the animal. That makes the composition easier to read at a glance. If you want a calmer result, use just two or three main colors and let the line art do the rest of the work. If you prefer a richer look, add shading inside the ears, around the trunk, and along the legs to create depth.
Good uses for finished pages
Completed elephant printables can be displayed on a wall, added to a binder, or used as a seasonal decoration when the page includes a birthday or holiday prop. The simpler pages are useful for quick coloring sessions, while the decorative ones are better for longer, quieter projects. Because the set includes wildlife scenes, cute characters, and alphabet-related images, it can also work well as a mixed-topic activity stack.
Elephant coloring pages are especially appealing because they can be realistic, sweet, patterned, or educational without losing the main subject. That makes the collection flexible for families, classrooms, and anyone who enjoys animal artwork with a lot of visual variety.
People Often Ask Us…
-
What is the difference between African and Asian elephants?
-
Why do elephants have trunks?
-
What do elephants eat in the wild?
-
Are baby elephants called calves?
-
Why are elephants shown with raised trunks?