Rabbit Coloring Pages
I never planned to be known as "the bunny person." It just sort of happened. One weird-looking sketch on a rainy afternoon turned into dozens of joyful bunnies. Then I published a full collection of 69 free rabbit coloring pages on ColoringPagesJourney. No signup. No forms. I made them for you — for after hard days at work, for keeping kids busy during holidays, or for when you need a break from your phone.
My Full Free Printable Rabbit Coloring Pages Set
The drawings feature bold outlines, balanced spacing, and natural curves. So this main set works for just about anyone — for little learners, patient hobbyists, or adults chasing calm through color. You’ll find a mix of playful, lifelike, and seasonal pieces, each crafted to feel both cozy and real. Then your brain gets quiet. Your body relaxes.
Bunny Styles For Everyone
The more rabbits I drew (and I drew LOTS), the more I felt their different moods: the show-offs, the shy ones, the chill ones. Each style has its own story — because, let's face it, we all color outside the lines sometimes.
Cute Rabbit Coloring Pages
These coloring activities for kids are full of fun and sweetness — hearts, balloons, and round faces that make bad days better. Big chunky shapes, not too fussy — great for quick wins before bedtime or when you need a mood lift faster than Amazon Prime.
Realistic Rabbit Coloring Pages
This is where I got really into rabbit drawing to print. These have real feeling — fur you want to touch, eyes that seem to watch you. Made for people who like tiny details, who own those big color pencil sets. The fur lets you play with light and shadow, like bringing paper to life.
Baby Rabbit Coloring Pages
I'm not gonna lie — these ones make me all mushy inside. Tiny bunnies taking naps or checking out big leaves. When I draw these, I think about wobbly first steps and new eyes. Great for family time when money's tight, small projects, or helping little kids learn to use crayons.
Kawaii Rabbit Coloring Pages
Some days you just want to color something that makes you go "awwww!" Huge sparkly eyes, silly carrot poses — these cartoon designs make me laugh while drawing them. Bright and bold like a sugar rush — perfect for your bullet journal, making stickers, or giving to friends who love rabbits.
Easy Rabbit Coloring Pages
Let's be honest — sometimes you don't have energy for a coloring masterpiece. These quick sheets have open spaces for trying new markers or playing with watercolors without stress. They're my go-to when work runs long — like a short break that feels longer.
Pages By Age Group
We're not all coloring for the same reasons, right? That's why I made pages that match where you're at in life, how much patience you've got left in the tank, and what kind of day you're having.
Rabbit Coloring Pages for Preschoolers
So many preschool teachers have written to thank me for these thick-lined, chunky shapes! They're apparently lifesavers on those holiday mornings when the kids are bouncing off the walls. Just enough to keep small fingers busy without causing fits or "I CAN'T DO IT" tantrums.
Rabbit Coloring Pages for Kids
Some simple, some more detailed. Egg hunts, picnics, backyard play — scenes that keep kids quiet and focused. I smile picturing kitchen tables across town, covered in crayons and half-done bunny images.
Rabbit Coloring Pages for Adults
I made these when I was super stressed and needed to focus on something besides problems. These mindful coloring sheets have mandala patterns and nature details — for when you need art to help you relax but can't pay for therapy. Lots of grown-ups tell me they use them for DIY crafts — making coasters or framing them as wall art.
Holiday Rabbits
Each season gives bunnies new storylines — cozy winter hideaways, spring flower patches, autumn harvest parties. I tried to catch that feeling of time passing in these sets.
Christmas Rabbit Coloring Pages
Rabbits in scarves, by candles, or near snowy trees. These bring back warm holiday memories. These festive Rabbit printables make sweet little gifts or projects while watching Christmas movies you've seen a hundred times.
Spring Rabbit Coloring Pages
Soft lines, fresh flowers, big skies — when I make these, I can almost smell spring coming. These Easter Rabbit coloring printable PDFs are full of sunshine and new starts, perfect for animal craft ideas or cards to send when flowers first come up.
Hares With Friends
In my mind, rabbits are social butterflies with lots of unexpected friendships. Their world is full of shared carrots and cozy hangouts. These sets show that "we're all in this together" feeling.
Cat and Rabbit Coloring Pages
This rabbit festive line art shows unlikely animal friends. Cats and rabbits sharing toys, food or sitting under trees. Drawing these feels like mixing things that shouldn't work but do — two completely different souls finding their groove together.
My Friend Rabbit Coloring Pages
These coloring pages of Rabbit give me warm feelings. Bunnies with foxes (weird friendship!), trading gifts, or just sitting under the falling leaves. Nothing beats seeing families color these together — kids learning about the whole "be kind to everyone, even if they're different" message without a lecture in sight.
Rabbit Eating Carrot Coloring Pages
Man, these bunnies look alive, don't they? Ears up like they heard something, tiny paws tucked in, happy with their carrots. These Rabbit with carrots printables don't have any fancy tricks up their sleeve — just clean, simple lines that make coloring feel as good as that first sip of coffee in the morning.
How These Rabbits Came To Life
To be honest, I thought my first Rabbit was hilarious. Tiny feet and strange ears. I gave it another go, though, because of its bashful smile. I watched it come to life on my page after six attempts.
"Why rabbits, instead of so many other animals?" you might wonder. Because of their slow movements? Maybe. I don't know. But the truth is, rabbits make me think of serene times. So I wanted to share some of that peace with others through this collection at ColoringPagesJourney.
A Reliable Place for Pages
ColoringPagesJourney began at my kitchen table with coffee stains on my drawings. Now it's grown huge. We share thousands of free designs to bring focus, fun, and artistic creativity to people everywhere — in Texas classrooms or Tokyo living rooms.
Quality
Every picture comes from my own hands — tested, fixed, and ready to use. Additionally, each design on this website gets checked for clarity and accessibility as coloring should be for everyone and all skill levels.
Licensing
You're welcome to use these for your home, classroom, or community projects. But you aren't allowed to sell them or re-post on other platforms (seriously, not cool).
Every pencil mark represents a feeling, such as joy, peace, or waiting. And those emotions return when color is added. Each line, therefore, seems to be urging you to take your time and pay attention to details, such as shadows, fur patterns, and the slowing of time.
Quick Downloads & Print From the Website
Simply click "Download." Choose from the following formats: PDF, JPG, PNG, and WEBP. Click "Print," and you're set to go.
I designed this site to be straightforward. No pop-ups or hassles, just art waiting for you. I discovered that files work flawlessly on regular A4 or US Letter paper.
A One-of-a-kind Feature
Every set includes "Coloring Ideas" images to give you some inspiration if you're stuck looking at a blank page.
You’ll see:
- which areas to fill first
- how to layer fur tones
- which hues to color carrots
Remember: They’re just guides. Not rules. Think of them as friendly hints from one artist to another.
TOP 10+ Real Ways to Use Rabbit Printables
After drawing about a million Rabbits, I noticed something: they fit into practically every corner of life. Let's explore now.
Fridge Art Display
Switch out kids' finished pages weekly like you're curating a fancy gallery. Builds their pride and confidence and keeps your kitchen feeling loved.
DIY Wall Collage
Mix different styles, put on colored paper, hang them up—creating a wall that shows your personality and warmth.
Easter Basket Gifts
Roll up free Easter Rabbit sheets, tie with lovely ribbon, tuck into baskets alongside those chocolate bunnies. Helps balance all that sugar.
Weekend Kid Projects
Print a stack, add crayons and glue sticks. Let kids color and cut their bunnies to create stories or paper chains. Yes, your dining table will look like a craft shop exploded. Worth it for the memories.
Birthday Table Fun
Print on thick paper (or cardstock), one per seat. Add small crayon packs. Keeps kids from asking "WHEN'S CAKE?" every three minutes.
Homemade Cards
Fold your colored masterpiece in half, write something sweet inside. Grandparents LOVE these homemade cards, trust me.
Family Color Night
Color together once a week. Talk about your day, share stories, laugh about the ridiculous stuff. No phones. No screens. Just an actual human connection
Classroom Calm-Down Tool
Keep a stash ready in bins. When class gets loud like a zoo, hand them out—a five-minute quiet trick that's saved many teachers' sanity.
Scrapbook Decorations
Use finished hare illustrations to fancy up your memory books—cheaper than those overpriced scrapbook store doodads.
Friend Coloring Contest
Color the same Rabbit templates with friends, then share what you made. It's wild how different they'll turn out — like those "spot the difference" puzzles but way more fun.
Morning School Warm-Up
Use coloring pages of a Rabbit to kick off school mornings. Get those little hands warmed up before tackling handwriting or other fine motor skills.
Party Goodie Bags
Mini pictures + tiny crayons = parents who don't hate your party favors. Kids stay entertained all the way home instead of asking "Are we there yet?" fifty times.
Make A Calendar
Print 12 Rabbits, one for each month. Add in all your family birthdays, anniversaries, and "don't forget to pay the electric bill" reminders.
Gift Wrap Add-Ons
Glue small colored bunnies onto wrapped presents — a handmade charm that feels personal without spending many hours.
What You’ll Get Out of This
Coloring may look simple, but it builds something powerful beneath the surface. It relieves stress, strengthens focus, and encourages expression.
You'll get:
- Creativity: new palettes = fresh perspective.
- Stress relief: a calm head when it all seems so noisy.
- Skill development: better fine motor skills for kids (sneaky developmental benefits!). More confidence playing with colors without overthinking it.
- Bonding: family moments that stick in your memory longer than the ink lasts on the page.
No deadlines. No pressure. Just lines, color, and calm.
Expert Shares
Priya who has a PhD with 10 years of experience in kids' art says, "When you put real feeling in your drawing, everyone who colors it feels that." I hope that authentic feeling shines through on every single page.
Emily (who's Dr. Emily Carter at work)—teaches art and makes prints—told me, "It's crazy rare to find print-ready pages made with this much attention to detail. This is what makes the difference between weekend hobbyists and real artists."
Helpful Techniques for Better Bunny Colors
Even a simple hare illustration can look amazing with a few tricks:
- Apply darker hues gradually after starting with lighter ones.
- Light backgrounds make the Rabbit steal the show.
- Spot tiny white-pen dots to give carrots and eyes a three-dimensional (3D) appearance.
- Combine two pencils—one sharper and one softer for the fur.
- Add texture on top of flat colors—total game-changer.
My artist friend Lucas stated, "Layers don't just look better; they add heart to your work." Couldn't agree more.
Printing Tips
"How do you know these will print well?" folks ask me all the time. Truth is, I print and color each one until my hand hurts, then do it again until it feels right.
Formats: Choose from PDF, JPG, PNG, or WEBP. The printable PDF sheets keep everything crisp and clean, which matters for classroom sets or craft projects.
Paper Types:
- For crayons or colored pencils (the kind you take from work): 80–100 gsm regular printer paper
- For markers or watercolors: 120–160 gsm matte paper
Printer Settings:
- To avoid strange cut-off bunny ears, use "Actual Size."
- For distinct lines that stand out like they mean business, try grayscale.
- Reduce the brightness slightly if everything appears too light on your printer.
Community Notes
Hearing stories now from real families — parents with kids, grandparents at Easter — fills my heart so much it hurts.
"My daughter and I colored for hours," Tanya from Michigan wrote me. "First time we've done something calm together since school started." Not gonna lie — I ugly-cried reading that email.
Wrapping Up
Want to start coloring now? Visit ColoringPagesJourney to find your perfect Rabbit image.
I believe art should be three things: free, personal, and made by actual human hands. All the Rabbit coloring pages you color here become parts of a bigger story. One page at a time—let color bring you peace.
So what are you waiting for? Print. Color. Create your own world of bunnies.
Frequently Asked Questions
At ColoringPagesJourney. Families can print at home, teachers can print for groups, and community events can use the pages for free.
No — all Rabbit illustrations are free to download instantly.
Each one is hand-tested, teacher-approved, and designed for print quality.
Definitely. Teachers worldwide use them for lessons and decor.
Regular copy paper is fine. For markers, pick heavyweight matte to reduce bleed.
Easy pages finish in 10–15 minutes. Realistic portraits can stretch to an hour, which many adults enjoy.
Yes. Marker base plus pencil texture is the fan favorite. A tiny gel-pen highlight adds sparkle.
Yes — just print on thicker matte paper.