Free Princess Mononoke Coloring Pages: 30+ printable pages featuring San, Princess Mononoke, Wolf Girl Mononoke, San with wolves, Moro, Moro and Princess Mononoke, Mononoke Hime and Moro, Princess Mononoke with Moro, cute chibi Princess Mononoke, chibi Princess Mononoke and Moro, beautiful Princess Mononoke, happy Princess Mononoke, cool Princess Mononoke, Princess Mononoke with flowers, printable Princess Mononoke designs, and forest-inspired anime scenes. These coloring sheets are great for Studio Ghibli fans, anime fans, older kids, teens, adults, fantasy coloring, nature-themed art, wolf coloring, character expression practice, forest color palettes, and screen-free creative time. All free, PDF or PNG, print or color online.

Princess Mononoke is a Studio Ghibli historical fantasy film directed by Hayao Miyazaki. The story follows Ashitaka, a young prince searching for a cure after being cursed, and San, a human girl raised by wolves who fiercely protects the forest. Around them is a world shaped by wolf guardians, forest life, human ambition, anger, survival, and the difficult question of whether people and nature can live together.

That gives Princess Mononoke coloring pages a deeper feeling than ordinary anime coloring sheets. These pages are not only about a pretty character portrait; they are about wilderness, loyalty, conflict, courage, identity, and the living forest. Colorists can work with San’s wild expression, her mask, her fur cape, Moro’s powerful wolf shape, wolf-pack scenes, forest leaves, flowers, chibi Mononoke designs, and quiet nature-inspired moments. Easier pages work well for quick anime coloring. In comparison, detailed San and Moro pages are better for older fans who enjoy expressive characters, strong shadows, layered fur, and Studio Ghibli-style forest atmosphere.

What’s Inside

San and Wolf Girl Mononoke Coloring Pages

San coloring pages are the center of this collection. San may appear standing, looking serious, wearing her fur cape, showing her wild expression, or appearing as the Wolf Girl known as Princess Mononoke. Her design is memorable because she is not a soft royal princess. She is fierce, protective, instinctive, and deeply connected to the forest.

These pages are strong for anime fans who enjoy characters with emotion and purpose. San’s face, eyes, hair, clothing, mask details, and body language all help tell the story of a girl caught between the human world and the forest world.

Wolf Girl Mononoke pages highlight San’s strongest identity: a human raised among wolves. These designs may show her with a wolf-like posture, a bold expression, or a protective stance. They carry movement, instinct, anger, loyalty, and survival energy.

Coloring San and Wolf Girl pages: Use dark blue, gray, white, cream, red, and earthy brown for San’s outfit, fur cape, and mask details. Keep her face clear and expressive. Add forest greens, shadowy browns, or muted blues around her to create a wild Studio Ghibli-style mood.

Moro and Wolf Clan Coloring Pages

Moro coloring pages focus on the great wolf mother and guardian figure. Moro may appear alone, beside San, or as part of a powerful wolf scene. Her large body, sharp eyes, strong muzzle, and thick fur make her one of the most visually important figures in Princess Mononoke coloring.

Moro pages are great for colorists who enjoy animals with strength and dignity. They also help the collection feel more mythical because Moro is not just a wolf; she represents ancient forest power, protection, and a bond that goes beyond ordinary animal friendship.

Wolf clan pages may include wolves standing beside San, watching carefully, resting, or guarding the forest. These pages can feel calm, protective, or intense depending on the line art.

Coloring Moro and wolf clan pages: Use white, gray, silver, cream, pale blue-gray, or cool lavender shadows for Moro and the wolves. Add darker gray around the eyes, nose, mouth, ears, paws, and fur layers. Use green, brown, moss, or misty blue backgrounds to place them inside the forest world.

San with Moro and Wolves Coloring Pages

San with Moro and wolves pages are some of the most meaningful designs in this collection. They may show Princess Mononoke standing near Moro, sitting with Moro, or appearing with the wolf pack. These pages show trust, protection, belonging, and emotional connection.

The contrast between San’s smaller human form and Moro’s powerful wolf body gives these pages strong visual balance. They are perfect for fans who want to color both character detail and animal detail on the same page.

These scenes also carry the heart of the story. San is not alone in the forest; she belongs to the wolves. Coloring these pages can become a quiet way to think about family, loyalty, identity, and defending a home.

Coloring San with Moro and wolves pages: Use San’s stronger red, blue, white, and earthy colors beside Moro’s pale wolf palette. Add soft shadows where the characters overlap. Use dark greens, moss tones, muted browns, or misty blues for the forest background.

Chibi Princess Mononoke Coloring Pages

Chibi Princess Mononoke pages make the collection lighter and more playful. These designs may show cute chibi San, chibi Mononoke with Moro, adorable expressions, simplified clothing, large eyes, and rounder shapes. They are easier to color than dramatic character portraits.

Chibi pages are useful for quick coloring, younger anime fans, party activities, and anyone who enjoys a softer version of the character. They keep the Princess Mononoke identity but reduce the intensity of the film’s darker themes.

Chibi Mononoke and Moro pages are especially good when you want a page that still feels connected to wolves and forest magic but has a friendly, cute, printable style.

Coloring chibi Princess Mononoke pages: Use bright but still natural colors. Try red for mask details, dark blue or gray for clothing, white for fur, and soft green or pastel blue backgrounds. Add blush marks, sparkles, tiny leaves, or small flowers if the page has open space.

Princess Mononoke with Flowers and Forest Coloring Pages

Princess Mononoke, with flowers and forest pages, brings out the nature side of the collection. These designs may show San with flowers, leaves, soft backgrounds, forest details, or calm nature elements. They feel more peaceful than intense wolf or warrior-style pages.

This group is important because Princess Mononoke is deeply connected to the forest. Flowers, leaves, branches, moss, and natural textures let colorists create a living environment, not just a character portrait.

These pages can also soften San’s fierce image. A flower scene may show the quieter side of the forest: beauty, growth, stillness, and fragile life.

Coloring flower and forest pages: Use deep greens, moss green, olive, brown, cream, and soft flower colors such as red, yellow, pink, lavender, or white. Keep the forest slightly muted so San remains the focus. Add layered greens to create depth.

Beautiful, Cool, and Mood-Based Princess Mononoke Coloring Pages

Beautiful, cool, happy, and mood-based Princess Mononoke pages show different emotional sides of San. Some pages may feel graceful, some bold, some calm, some intense, and some more cheerful or simplified. This gives the collection emotional range beyond the serious forest-warrior image.

These pages are helpful for colorists who want to choose a mood before choosing colors. A cool Mononoke page can use strong contrast. A beautiful portrait can use softer shading. A happy or lighter page can use brighter natural colors.

This group also works well for anime expression practice. San’s eyes, eyebrows, mouth, posture, and mask details can change the whole feeling of the page.

Coloring mood-based Mononoke pages: Match the palette to the feeling. Use deeper shadows for cool and dramatic pages, softer greens and creams for beautiful pages, and warmer colors for happy or friendly pages. Keep the eyes and facial expression clean.

Printable and Easy Princess Mononoke Anime Pages

Printable and easy Princess Mononoke pages include clean San designs, simple chibi pages, free printable layouts, and pages made for quick printing and easy coloring. These pages are useful when you want a fast activity without many background details.

They are also practical for anime fans who want to print several pages and try different color palettes: one dark forest version, one softer chibi version, one wolf-girl version, and one flower version.

Easy pages are best for quick coloring, simple anime practice, and younger fans who prefer larger shapes. Chibi San, simple San portraits, and clean San-with-wolf pages are good starting points.

Coloring printable and easy pages: Start with the main figure first. Choose San’s clothing and fur colors, then add simple background tones. Use crayons or markers for large shapes, and add small details with colored pencils if needed.

Detailed Princess Mononoke Coloring Pages

Detailed Princess Mononoke pages are better for older kids, teens, adults, Studio Ghibli fans, and colorists who enjoy careful shading. These pages may include San with Moro, wolf pack scenes, dramatic expressions, flower backgrounds, fur textures, mask details, and layered forest elements.

Detailed pages allow colorists to build atmosphere. The same drawing can feel peaceful, angry, lonely, wild, or hopeful depending on the colors used. That is one reason Princess Mononoke pages are more powerful than many simple anime designs.

These pages also work well for art clubs and nature-themed coloring because they combine character expression, animal anatomy, and forest detail.

Coloring detailed pages: Use colored pencils for fur, eyes, forest leaves, flowers, hair strands, mask lines, and shadows. Color San and Moro first, then build the forest mood around them with layered greens, browns, misty blues, and soft gray shadows.

What These Pages Do

Princess Mononoke coloring pages help users quickly find printable or online coloring sheets based on San, Wolf Girl Mononoke, Princess Mononoke, Moro, San with wolves, Mononoke Hime and Moro, chibi Princess Mononoke, Princess Mononoke with flowers, printable anime designs, and forest-inspired fantasy scenes. Anime fans can choose dramatic San portraits. Studio Ghibli fans can choose San and Moro pages. Younger fans can start with chibi pages. Older colorists can enjoy detailed wolf, forest, and character expression pages.

The strongest value of this collection is nature-and-identity storytelling. A Princess Mononoke page is not only a character image; it can become a visual question. Is San protecting the forest? Is Moro watching over her? Is the wolf pack calm or ready to defend its home? Is the scene peaceful, angry, lonely, or hopeful? These questions make the coloring activity deeper than filling a simple anime outline.

These pages also support thoughtful anime art practice. Colorists can practice expressive eyes, dark hair, fur texture, wolf bodies, forest leaves, flower details, mask shapes, shadows, and natural color palettes. The collection works well for people who want both anime character coloring and nature-based fantasy coloring.

For older children, teens, and Studio Ghibli fans, Princess Mononoke pages can work like a “forest, feeling, and choice” creative prompt. The American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes that play supports children’s social-emotional, cognitive, language, and self-regulation development. In this collection, that idea can connect to story-based coloring: a colorist can imagine San choosing whether to trust someone, Moro protecting the wolf clan, or the forest showing both beauty and danger. While coloring, children and teens can describe the scene, name the feeling, talk about loyalty or anger, and imagine how humans and nature might find balance.

These pages can also offer a calm, structured creative break. Research published in Art Therapy has discussed how coloring organized designs with clear boundaries and repeated forms may help reduce short-term anxiety more than fully open-ended drawing. Princess Mononoke coloring pages should not be presented as therapy. Still, their wolf fur lines, mask shapes, flower petals, forest leaves, hair strands, animal outlines, and repeated natural patterns give colorists a clear path to follow with color. That structure can support a quieter, focused, screen-free moment for anime fans who enjoy detailed nature and character line art.

Coloring also supports fine motor practice. Colorists work on hair strands, eyes, wolf fur, flower petals, small leaves, mask lines, clothing edges, facial expressions, and background details. These areas help build hand control, pencil pressure, patience, and attention to small shapes.

When choosing a page, match the design to the colorist’s age, interest, and patience level. For easier pages, choose chibi Princess Mononoke, simple San portraits, cute Mononoke pages, or clean printable designs. For older fans, choose San with wolves, San and Moro, detailed Moro pages, flower scenes, forest backgrounds, and dramatic Wolf Girl Mononoke portraits.

Princess Mononoke pages are especially useful because they combine anime, wolves, nature, forest mythology, character emotion, environmental themes, and Studio Ghibli atmosphere. That makes the collection practical for home coloring, anime fan activities, nature art lessons, fantasy art clubs, character expression study, quiet breaks, and printable screen-free creativity.

How to Color Princess Mononoke Coloring Pages

Start with San’s classic look. Use dark blue, gray, white, cream, red, and earthy brown for San’s outfit, mask details, and fur cape. Keep the face clear so her expression stays strong.

Use natural wolf colors for Moro. Moro and the wolves look powerful with white, silver, gray, cream, and pale blue-gray shadows. Add darker shading around the eyes, nose, ears, paws, and fur edges.

Build a deep forest palette. Princess Mononoke pages work best with forest colors such as moss green, dark green, olive, brown, black-green, gray, and muted blue. Use several greens instead of one flat color.

Make San’s mask details stand out. If the page includes a mask, use red, white, black, or deep brown for strong contrast. Add small shadows around the mask edges to make it feel important.

Keep chibi pages softer. Chibi Mononoke pages can use brighter colors, pastel backgrounds, small sparkles, tiny leaves, or flowers. This makes the design cute without losing the forest theme.

Use flowers to soften dramatic pages. If San appears with flowers, use gentle colors such as pink, yellow, white, lavender, or pale red. Let the flowers add contrast to San’s stronger warrior look.

Add shadows for dramatic portraits. Use colored pencils to shade around the hair, fur cape, eyes, shoulders, and background. This helps San look more intense and cinematic.

Color wolf fur in layers. Start with a light base color, then add gray, silver, or blue shadows. Use short strokes along the direction of the fur to create texture.

Use markers for clean anime pages. Markers work well for simple San portraits, chibi pages, and large clothing shapes.

Use colored pencils for detailed forest pages. Colored pencils are best for fur texture, leaves, flowers, hair strands, eyes, and subtle shadows.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Princess Mononoke Coloring Pages

San and Moro Forest Poster

Print a San and Moro coloring page. After coloring, glue it onto dark green or brown cardstock.

Draw extra forest leaves, branches, moss, and moonlight around the scene. Add the words “Protect the Forest” or “Spirit of the Wild” to turn the page into a dramatic Studio Ghibli-style poster.

Wolf Clan Bookmark Set

Print pages with San, Moro, or wolves. Color and cut narrow sections into bookmark shapes.

Use white, gray, silver, and forest green colors. Add small paw prints, leaves, or simple phrases such as “Stay Wild,” “Forest Spirit,” or “Run with Wolves.” Cover with clear tape for durability.

Princess Mononoke Mask Frame

Print a San page that includes her mask, or draw a mask shape beside the finished coloring page.

Glue the page onto cardstock and decorate the frame with red, white, black, and forest green patterns. Add small leaves or wolf tracks around the border.

Forest Balance Story Card

Choose a Princess Mononoke page with San, Moro, wolves, or flowers. After coloring, fold the cardstock into a card and glue the page on the front.

Inside the card, write a short story prompt: “The forest is angry because…” or “San protects the forest by…” This craft connects coloring with creative writing and environmental thinking.

Chibi Mononoke Mini Gallery

Print several chibi Princess Mononoke pages. Color each one with a different mood: cute, brave, calm, wild, or happy.

Cut them out and glue them onto one sheet as a mini gallery. Add small labels under each chibi character to practice emotion words and anime expressions.

FAQ About Princess Mononoke Coloring Pages

Are these Princess Mononoke coloring pages free to print?

Yes. These Princess Mononoke coloring pages are free to download and print. You can choose one favorite page for a quick activity or print several designs for anime fan art, Studio Ghibli coloring, nature-themed art, fantasy coloring, or screen-free creative time.

Can I color Princess Mononoke pages online?

Yes. You can color Princess Mononoke pages online if you do not want to print them. Online coloring is useful for quick anime coloring, tablet activities, and no-paper creativity. If you want to make posters, bookmarks, cards, frames, or mini galleries, printing the PDF or PNG version is better.

Which Princess Mononoke characters and scenes are included?

The collection includes San, Princess Mononoke, Wolf Girl Mononoke, Moro, San with wolves, Mononoke Hime and Moro, chibi Princess Mononoke, chibi Princess Mononoke and Moro, beautiful Mononoke pages, happy Mononoke pages, cool Mononoke pages, flower scenes, and printable anime designs.

Are Princess Mononoke coloring pages good for young children?

Some chibi Princess Mononoke and simple San pages can work for younger anime fans because the shapes are cleaner and friendlier. More dramatic San, Moro, wolf, and detailed forest pages are better for older kids, teens, adults, and Studio Ghibli fans because they include stronger moods and smaller details.

What colors should I use for San?

Use dark blue, gray, white, cream, red, and earthy brown for San’s outfit, fur cape, and mask details. Use black or dark brown for her hair, and add soft skin tones for the face. Forest greens and muted browns work well in the background.

What colors should I use for Moro and the wolves?

Use white, silver, gray, cream, pale blue-gray, or cool lavender shadows for Moro and the wolves. Add darker shading around the eyes, nose, mouth, ears, paws, and fur layers to make them look powerful.

How can I make the forest background look better?

Use several greens instead of one flat green. Try moss green, olive, dark green, yellow-green, and blue-green. Add brown branches, gray stones, soft shadows, and small flower colors for depth.

How can teachers or art clubs use these pages?

Teachers and art club leaders can use Princess Mononoke coloring pages for anime shading practice, character expression study, nature art lessons, environmental discussion prompts, fantasy creature coloring, and creative writing activities about forests, wolves, and balance.

What paper is best for printing these coloring pages?

Regular printer paper works well for crayons and colored pencils. If you use markers, thicker paper or cardstock is better because it reduces bleed-through. Cardstock is also best for posters, bookmarks, story cards, frames, and mini galleries.

Can finished Princess Mononoke coloring pages be used for crafts?

Yes. Finished pages can become San and Moro forest posters, wolf clan bookmarks, Princess Mononoke mask frames, forest balance story cards, chibi Mononoke mini galleries, anime room decor, art club displays, or Studio Ghibli fan art projects.

Browse the full collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com. All 30+ pages are free, available in PDF or PNG format, ready to print at home or color online.

These Princess Mononoke pages are created for personal, fan, classroom art club, and creative coloring use. They fit many moments: Studio Ghibli coloring practice, anime fan activities, wolf coloring, forest art lessons, character expression exercises, nature-themed art, teen coloring sessions, quiet breaks, and screen-free fan creativity.

For the final pass, keep San fierce, Moro powerful, the wolves protective, chibi pages soft, flowers gentle, and the forest deep. Add shadows, leaves, moss, moonlight, wolf tracks, forest mist, or small story details to make each page feel connected to the living forest.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We especially want to see your San and Moro Forest Poster, Wolf Clan Bookmark Set, and Princess Mononoke Mask Frame.

These related coloring collections will help you explore more Studio Ghibli, anime, wolves, forests, and fantasy coloring fun. Let’s choose, be creative, and show us your great pictures!

Jennifer Thoa – Content Editor & Designer

Jennifer Thoa is Content Editor and Designer at ColoringPagesOnly.com. Degree in Journalism and Creative Writing, University of Kansas. She writes and edits long-form educational articles on anime, film, animals, world cultures, and automotive history - verified against named primary sources before publication.