Anne of Green Gables Coloring Pages (Free PDF Printables)

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If there’s one story that makes grown-ups sigh in the best way and kids lean in a little closer, it’s Anne of Green Gables. There’s something timeless about a red-haired girl who talks too fast, loves too hard, and finds magic in a “Lake of Shining Waters” and a lane of wind-rustled blossoms. For families and classrooms, Anne of Green Gables coloring pages are one of the easiest, warmest ways to invite that whimsical world into your living room, library corner, or Sunday school craft table.

Whether you’re a parent planning a rainy-afternoon reset, a teacher building a Classic Literature / Canadian History / PEI mini-unit, or a homeschooler craving “quiet, meaningful hands-on time,” these pages pull double duty: they calm busy kids and open the door to storytelling, rich vocabulary, and old-fashioned imagination.

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📥 How to Download Your Free Anne of Green Gables Coloring Pages

Getting started is super easy! To use any of these free printable Anne of Green Gables coloring pages, simply click on any image or download link below. Each link will open a high-resolution PDF file in a new tab, ready for instant download or printing.

All our printable pages are formatted for standard US Letter size (8.5 x 11 inches), which also prints beautifully on A4 paper—so no matter where you are in the world, they’ll fit just right!

You can choose to print a single page for a quick creative activity or download the entire collection to build your very own DIY Anne of Green Gables Coloring Book at home.

🌸 Why Anne of Green Gables Coloring Pages Work So Well for Kids

Coloring is often dismissed as “just a time-filler,” but with Anne, it becomes a stealthy literature gateway:

  • Vocabulary grows organically

You’ll find yourself using words kids rarely hear these days: cottage, orchard, pantry, bonnet, slate, chore, kindred spirit, bosom friend.

  • Character conversations come naturally

While a child fills in Anne’s copper hair or the trim on a garden gate, it’s the perfect moment to ask, “Why do you think Anne cares so much about puffed sleeves?” or “Have you ever wanted something to look a certain way, and then it didn’t?”

  • Fine motor skills + focus

For preschoolers and early elementary kids, staying inside lace-like dress edges, rooflines, and flower petals builds pencil control without feeling like drill practice.

And honestly? There’s a reason so many adults color alongside their kids here. The aesthetic—soft sage greens, warm berry reds, wildflower purples, and that crisp maritime light—is just lovely to sit with.

👧 Finding the Right Anne of Green Gables Coloring Pages for Every Age

Not every child wants the same level of detail. The trick is matching the complexity to their attention span:

1) Toddlers & Preschoolers (thick lines, big shapes)

Look for friendly, simple scenes:

  • Anne standing near a picket fence with a single daisy in hand
  • A cozy “Green Gables” cottage outline with big windows and a chimney
  • A bucket of ripe strawberries or a basket of apples (perfect for practicing red/crimson shades)

These “easy” sheets are forgiving. The win isn’t realism—it’s I finished it, and that confidence carries straight into later handwriting and drawing practice.

2) Kindergarten–Grade 2 (clear details, light storytelling)

This is the sweet spot for “character moments”:

  • Anne sharing tea with Diana (“bosom friends” vibes)
  • A school slate, a starched apron, a loose braid, or a window seat piled with books
  • Garden paths, low stone walls, and budding lilac bushes

Kids this age love naming the scene: Is this the day Anne invited Diana over? Is this before or after the… oops… raspberry cordial mix-up? That’s literacy disguised as play.

3) Grades 3–5 / Older Kids (florals, trims, textures, mood)

Here you can go prettier and busier:

  • Puffed sleeves and lace collar details, woven rail fences, rough stone foundations, and tall swaying grasses
  • “Lake of Shining Waters” reflections, weeping willow branches, and cloud-streaked skies
  • Decorative borders/frames so kids can write a favorite quote or scene title beneath the picture

If an older child wants to treat a simple cartoon page like a poster and an Anne of Green Gables coloring sheet like a detailed portrait, let them—every style teaches something different.

🎨 Creative Ways to Use Your Anne of Green Gables Coloring Sheets

An Anne of Green Gables coloring sheet doesn’t have to stop at “fill the lines.”

1) “Puffed Sleeve” Paper Collage

Color the dress, then glue tiny strips of tissue paper or vellum to the sleeves for dimension. It turns a flat page into something soft and tactile—kids love the hands-on element.

2) Watercolor-Wash Backgrounds

Lightly paint the sky and grass around the figure with pale watercolor, then go back in with colored pencils for the finer details. It feels very “Avonlea sunset,” and keeps colors from getting muddy if you avoid soaking the paper.

3) The “Quote Frame”

Pick a kid-friendly line (“Kindred spirits,” “Lake of Shining Waters,” “I don’t know what lies around the bend…”) and write it in loopy, playful handwriting along the bottom or inside a hand-drawn banner. Instant wall art for a bedroom gallery or classroom Classic Books board.

📖 4 Gentle Prompts to Use Your Anne of Green Gables Coloring Pages

You don’t need a formal worksheet to make this educational. Try these while the crayons are moving:

  1. Rename the World (Anne-style)

Ask your child to rename three things in the room poetically: a lamp becomes “The Guardian of the Reading Nook,” a mug becomes “The Cup of Comfort.” It’s silly, builds vocabulary, and mirrors exactly how Anne sees Avonlea.

  1. Feelings Check-In

Talk about a moment in the story that felt embarrassing (the cake disaster) or lonely (her first night at Green Gables) or joyful (when Matthew says she can stay). Then ask: Which part is easiest to draw? Which part is hardest?

  1. Compare & Contrast

Anne and Diana vs. early-chapter Anne and Gilbert. Marilla’s stiff exterior vs. her soft interior. The house at the start vs. the home it becomes by the end. These are gentle compare/contrast skills that transfer straight to reading comprehension.

  1. Mini “Kindness Scene” Challenge

Ask the child to add one tiny extra detail to the background that shows care: a vase of wildflowers on the table, a loaf of bread wrapped in linen, a sleepy cat by the hearth. Small choices, big character-building conversations.

🏡 Little Extensions for Your Anne of Green Gables Coloring Pages

If you want to stretch coloring time into a low-prep mini-unit:

  • Nature walk tie-in

Collect a leaf, a twig, and a flower on a walk, then try to match the colors to the page.

  • “Green Gables” diorama

Shoebox + foil/mirror for the lake + colored paper trees. Cut out your child’s finished Anne of Green Gables coloring pictures and prop them inside as characters.

  • Story-themed tea time

Even if it’s just apple juice in a real cup, serving it next to the finished art makes the whole activity feel true to the story.

💖 Final Touch

If your child ends up with a stack of favorites, don’t let them vanish into a drawer.

Stack the completed Anne of Green Gables coloring pictures, punch holes along the left edge, and tie them with baker’s twine or slide them into a small binder with plastic sleeves. You’ve just made a homemade Anne of Green Gables coloring book—part portfolio, part storybook, part memory of an afternoon well spent.

Because at the end of the day, that’s what Anne’s story is really about: paying attention to small beauties, making magic out of ordinary things, and finding your people. And if a coloring page helps a kid slow down long enough to feel that? That’s a very good use of a pencil.