Lemur Coloring Pages
Lemur Coloring Pages bring Madagascar-inspired charm to your desk, with poses and faces that are instantly fun to color. You will find everything from quick, simple outlines to more detailed woodland and jungle scenes. Expect long tails, striped fur patterns, and plenty of open space for your own background ideas. The set also mixes cute cartoon styles with more realistic forest-clearings and habitat moments.

Print on thicker paper (like 80–120 lb) so markers and colored pencils blend smoothly. Choose “Fit to page” and keep margins enabled so those tails, branches, and rock shapes do not get cut off. For ink saving, use draft or grayscale first, then reprint only the pages you want most.
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What you’ll color in this lemur set
Lemurs have that special mix of “cute factor” and distinctive details, and this collection leans hard into both. Many pages feature clean outlines of a lemur body and long, ringed tails, so even beginners can jump in without getting overwhelmed. Others shift into more scene-based printables, placing lemurs on rocks, perched on vines, or sitting on branches in leafy forests where you can build color layers.
Across the theme, you’ll see a variety of body positions that make the pages feel fresh from sheet to sheet: a ring-tailed lemur standing on a rock with a striped tail, a lemur perched along a vine with leaves around it, and lemurs hanging from branches with tails curved below. There are also profile poses with long tails, plus close-up faces with big eyes and striped fur that highlight the lemur’s expression. If you like switching between “character focus” and “full scene,” this set naturally gives you that balance.
Styles and scene types that match different coloring moods
Not every page is drawn the same way, and that is part of what makes the printable set satisfying to revisit. Some sheets are intentionally simple: a single lemur standing with a few leaves on the ground, a small lemur with bold lines standing alone, or a lemur tail stretched across the page with clear striping you can fill in quickly. These are great for short, relaxing sessions or for younger colorers practicing staying inside the lines.
On the other hand, the set also includes more detailed and atmospheric scenes. Look for a realistic lemur sitting on a stump in a forest clearing, a lemur perched on a branch with baobab trees in the background, and a lemur in a jungle setting with multiple animals exploring a path together. There are even pages where lemurs gather under a broad tree as a family, which gives you a natural opportunity to choose a coordinating color palette for background leaves, branches, and the ground.
The variety extends to more “storybook” and playful art styles too. You’ll find cartoon lemurs with big eyes sitting on logs, a lemur with a playful grin on a branch, and kawaii lemurs with round cheeks and a tiny flower. Some designs add accessories or interactions, like a smiling lemur with a scarf beside a mushroom, a baby lemur clinging to a tree trunk with a leaf, or a lemur being fed at a habitat by a zookeeper. Those moments help the coloring feel like storytelling, not just filling shapes with color.
Tips for coloring the signature lemur details
1) Striping and ringed tails
Striped rings are the lemur’s most recognizable feature, so they are worth slowing down for. Try blending two similar pencil shades for the lighter bands, then use a slightly deeper tone for the darker stripes. If you prefer markers, outline the stripe edges with a darker pencil to keep the bands crisp, especially on pages with tails reaching across the page or curving below a branch.
2) Big eyes and facial expressions
Many sheets include close-up faces with big eyes. Consider using a warm highlight color (like light peach or pale yellow) inside the eye areas, then add a slightly cooler tone around the pupil to make the face pop. For cartoon and kawaii styles, cheeks can get a gentle blush, which instantly boosts the “friendly” mood of the character.
3) Leaves, vines, and foliage textures
Pages with vines and leaves can become your background canvas. Choose one main leaf green and one accent color. For example, make the underside of leaves a lighter green and add pops of yellow or warm brown where stems cross. This works especially well on scenes with open space, such as the lemur perched on a vine or the lemur resting beside a small palm plant.
4) Branches, rocks, and stumps
When a lemur sits on a rock or stump, you can add texture quickly with light-to-dark gradients. Use darker tones for shadows under the paws and tail, and lighter tones on the top edges. That simple shading trick makes the page look more dimensional even if the line art stays straightforward.
How to use these pages at home, in class, or for calm downtime
Because the set includes both easy outlines and more elaborate jungle scenes, you can match the page to the time you have. For a quick activity, start with the single-lemur sheets, such as a lemur face close-up, a simple lemur standing, or a lemur holding a banana. For longer sessions, try the family under a broad tree, the group exploring a forest path, or the habitat moment with a zookeeper feeding a lemur, since those scenes encourage richer background choices.
In a classroom or group setting, these printables work well for differentiated activity. Younger students can color the simple lemur outlines first, then move up to detailed pages with baobab trees, bamboo stalks, or decorative mandala-style patterns surrounding a lemur. Adults and older kids often enjoy the realistic or layered forest-clearing pages, where careful shading on leaves and wood makes the final result feel polished.
Creative ways to personalize your lemur coloring pages
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Pick a theme palette for a set of pages, like “golden bamboo” for the bamboo lemur sheet and coordinated warm browns for tree stumps and branches.
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Use open space to add your own clouds, sun rays, or small plants behind the lemur perched on a branch, especially on designs that already leave room for a background.
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Turn accessories into focal points: color a scarf with a bold, contrasting hue next to the mushroom, or shade the banana with realistic yellow gradients on the lemur holding it.
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If a page includes multiple lemurs exploring together, give each one a slightly different accent color in the fur bands or clothing details (where present) so they look like a coordinated group.
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For mandala-style pages featuring a lemur surrounded by decorative shapes, use alternating colors by ring so the pattern feels intentional rather than random.
Works well with different coloring tools
These coloring pages are flexible for many mediums. Colored pencils look especially good on realistic scenes like the lemur on a stump in a forest clearing, since you can build fine texture in bark, leaves, and facial stripes. Markers can be great for clean, simple outlines and cartoon pages because the thicker lines help keep the results sharp. If you enjoy mixed media, try coloring the lemur first, then add a light wash of watercolor to the background foliage areas using the open space on vine, branch, and forest-path scenes.
Whether you gravitate toward cute kawaii expressions, more realistic woodland detail, or bold tail striping that stretches across the page, Lemur Coloring Pages offer a steady stream of engaging prompts. Print a handful, choose your preferred style for the day, and enjoy a screen-free break where every lemur pose becomes its own little artwork.
People Often Ask Us…
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Which Lemur Coloring Pages are best for toddlers or early learners?
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How do I prevent bleed-through when coloring Lemur Coloring Pages with markers?
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What’s the easiest way to color lemur stripes so they look consistent on different poses?
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How can I use open background space in Lemur Coloring Pages to make a theme set for scrapbooking?
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Should I print simple lemur outline pages or detailed forest scenes first—and how do I decide quickly?