Baddie Coloring Pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com brings together 30+ free pages built around the baddie aesthetic – the social media-born visual language of confidence, street fashion, and full-glam beauty that defined a particular era of Instagram and TikTok culture. Street style, Y2K looks, makeup close-ups, leather jackets, hoodies, selfie poses, and the relaxed-but-put-together energy of the aesthetic across 30+ individual pages. Download any page as a PDF to print, or color online in your browser. The full Fashion collection is at Fashion Coloring Pages.
What is the Baddie Aesthetic?
The “baddie” aesthetic emerged from Instagram and hip-hop/R&B culture through the mid-2010s and became fully mainstream through TikTok by the early 2020s. At its core, the baddie aesthetic is about projecting confidence and intentionality through appearance – looking like you put in the effort, and knowing it.
The visual elements that define it are specific and recognizable. On the fashion side: crop tops, high-waisted bottoms, biker shorts, form-fitting sets, oversized hoodies worn as dresses, thigh-high boots, and the general combination of comfort and style associated with streetwear. On the beauty side: bold brows, a fully contoured face, dramatic lashes (real or false), lip liner, and a lip that’s either in the nude-brown family or in a deep red or berry. Acrylic nails in coffin or almond shape, hoop earrings, layered chains, and sunglasses complete the look. The hair can be any style – sleek straight, voluminous curls, a high ponytail, box braids – but it’s always intentional.
What separates the baddie aesthetic from related aesthetics is primarily attitude. The expression is confident rather than soft, direct rather than demure. A baddie looks at the camera – or away from it – like she has somewhere more important to be.
The collection contains several sub-aesthetics within the broader baddie framework. Y2K Baddie applies the confidence of the baddie aesthetic through early-2000s fashion references – low-rise fits, butterfly clips, metallic fabrics, baby tees, the whole early-internet-era nostalgia visual language. Retro Baddie reaches back further, incorporating ’70s and ’90s elements. Sporty Baddie overlaps with the athleisure aesthetic – matching sets, sneakers, sports bras, high-performance-meets-everyday-fashion. Kawaii Baddie blends the baddie’s confidence with the soft, rounded, pastel-and-cute visual language of kawaii illustration. Cozy Baddie is the at-home, off-duty version – oversized knitwear, loungewear, the aesthetic maintained even in relaxed domestic settings.
What’s in This Collection
The 30+ pages cover the baddie aesthetic across a wide range of specific situations, sub-styles, and mood registers.
Street style pages – Street Style Baddie, Street Baddie Style – show the baddie in her natural urban environment, with the specific combination of streetwear elements (sneakers, hoodies, oversized outerwear) and the confident posture of the aesthetic.
Makeup and beauty pages – Baddie With Bold Eyeliner, Baddie With Lip Gloss, Pretty Baddie Face, Makeup Baddie – focus on the face and the beauty dimension of the aesthetic. These are the most detail-intensive pages in the collection, with carefully rendered features that reward precise, small-area coloring.
Y2K aesthetic pages – Y2K Baddie Look, Y2K Baddie Outfit – apply the baddie’s confidence and composition to the early-2000s fashion references that have driven one of the most sustained nostalgia trends in recent fashion history.
Retro and vintage pages – Retro Baddie Girl – step back further in time, incorporating visual references to earlier decades within the same confident contemporary framing.
Activity and lifestyle pages – Baddie Dancing, Baddie Reading, Baddie Relaxing, Baddie Girl Selfie – show the baddie not just in her best-dressed posed state but in activity. The selfie page is particularly of-the-moment: the act of taking a selfie is one of the baddie aesthetic’s most iconic gestures.
Specific clothing pages – Baddie In Leather Jacket, Baddie Girl in a Hoodie, Long Hair Baddie, Curly Hair Baddie – are organized around a specific garment or hair type that defines the look. The leather jacket page and hoodie page represent opposite ends of the baddie spectrum: the former is dressed-up street-edge, the latter is casual-elevated.
Sub-aesthetic pages – Kawaii Baddie Girl, Cozy Baddie Look, Winter Baddie Vibe, Sport Baddie Vibe, Sporty Baddie Style – each apply the baddie’s visual confidence to a distinct sub-register.
Portrait and pose pages – Trendy Baddie Pose, Stylish Baddie Look, Chill Baddie Girl, Sweet But Savage Baddie, Cool Girl Pose, Baddie Girl Aesthetic, Cute Baddie Vibes, Baddie Lady, Fashion Baddie Art – are the most general pages, focused on the character type and expression rather than a specific garment or situation.
Coloring Tips
The baddie color palette is built on a specific combination of neutrals and accent colors that is more constrained than it might first appear. The base palette – skin, natural hair, everyday clothing – tends toward warm neutrals: beige, camel, warm cream, oatmeal, tan, chocolate brown. These earth tones form the background of almost every baddie illustration and give the makeup and accessory colors something to pop against. The accent colors – nail color, lip color, eyeshadow – are where the boldness happens.
Skin tone is the first and most important decision on any page that features a close-up face or significant skin area. The baddie aesthetic is genuinely diverse in its representation of skin tones – dark, medium, and light skin tones all appear equally within the aesthetic. There is no “default” baddie skin color, and the coloring pages reflect this by leaving the skin tone completely open. Choose a skin tone you want to represent and commit to it across every skin area of the page – neck, décolletage, hands, and face must all be the same value. Inconsistency in skin tone across one illustration is the most visually jarring coloring mistake on portrait pages.
Brows define the baddie face more than any other single makeup element. They should be full, well-defined, and significantly darker than the surrounding skin tone – even on light-skinned figures, the brows are a dark warm brown or near-black that creates strong contrast. The shape is important: straight across the top arch, slightly fuller at the inner corner, and precision-cut at the lower edge. On close-up face pages like Pretty Baddie Face and Baddie With Bold Eyeliner, spending extra time on the brow color and keeping it very dark and clean-edged produces the most recognizable result.
Eyeliner on the Baddie With Bold Eyeliner page is the opportunity to commit to a very deep, saturated black or near-black at the lash line, extending to a wing at the outer corner. The eye shadow, if visible, can be anything from a neutral warm brown to a dramatic cut-crease in a deeper color – brown, burgundy, or a smoky dark grey. The contrast between the very dark liner and the skin tone above it is what makes the eye read as full-glam baddie rather than minimal.
Lips in the baddie aesthetic fall into two families: the nude-brown lip and the bold statement lip. The nude-brown family runs from beige-pink to warm taupe to caramel to mocha – the defining feature is that the color is close to the natural lip but slightly darker and more defined, with a visible lip liner edge. The statement lip is deep burgundy, classic red, or a berry-toned plum. The Baddie With Lip Gloss page specifically calls for a glossy finish – apply the lip color and then add a lighter, brighter value in the center of the lower lip to suggest the shine.
For the Y2K pages – Y2K Baddie Look, Y2K Baddie Outfit – the palette shifts from the earthy neutrals of contemporary baddie to the specific color associations of early-2000s fashion: baby blue, lilac, bubblegum pink, silver-metallic, white, and the occasional neon. Butterfly clips or similar accessories in these pages would be rendered in the same baby blue or metallic silver. Low-rise jeans in the Y2K pages should be a slightly faded medium blue – more bleached and lighter than contemporary dark-wash denim.
For the leather jacket page, the jacket itself is the visual statement. A black leather jacket should be rendered in very dark grey-black for the main surfaces, with slightly lighter grey at the edges and fold lines where the leather catches light, and a tiny highlight – almost white – at the sharpest edge of the collar and lapel. The shine of leather is what distinguishes it from matte fabric: very dark main body, bright edge highlights, nothing in between.
For hair pages – Long Hair Baddie, Curly Hair Baddie – the hair is the main coloring event of the page. Long straight hair in dark brown or black benefits from directional highlighting – a lighter stripe running from the crown down through the length of the hair, suggesting the shine of healthy, well-maintained hair. Curly hair in any color calls for a different technique: color the base dark, then leave lighter irregular areas scattered through the curl masses to suggest where light catches the coil at different angles.
For the Sporty Baddie and Sport Baddie pages – athletic clothing reads best in clean, saturated colors applied flatly and evenly: white, black, deep red, royal blue, or bold green. Unlike leather, athletic fabric doesn’t reflect – it absorbs. Flat, even color application with no highlight reads as more realistic for spandex, biker shorts, and athletic sets than shaded or highlighted application.
5 Activities with Your Baddie Pages
Color the same face in three different makeup looks. Print Pretty Baddie Face three times. Color the first as a nude baddie look: warm beige lips, soft brown shadow, natural skin, only the brows bold. Color the second as full glam: dark, dramatic eye, deep burgundy or red lip, strong contour. Color the third as your own invented look – any makeup combination you want, no rules. Display all three finished versions side by side under the labels “Minimal,” “Full Glam,” and “Your Look.” The exercise shows how much makeup color alone changes the character’s personality and register, even when the face structure and skin tone stay identical across all three pages.
Color a Y2K vs. contemporary street style comparison. Print Y2K Baddie Outfit and Street Style Baddie. Color the Y2K page in a palette specific to early-2000s fashion: baby blue, lilac, silver, white, bubblegum pink. Color the Street Style Baddie in a contemporary palette: earth tones, neutrals, black, camel, with one strong accent color (deep red, forest green, or cobalt). Display the two finished pages side by side. The exercise demonstrates how strongly the color palette carries era – the same character type in a different palette reads as a completely different decade, even with similar illustration styles.
The leather jacket close study. Print Baddie in a leather jacket and spend more time on it than you would on a typical coloring page. Focus specifically on getting the leather right: a very dark charcoal-black for the main body, a lighter mid-grey only at fold lines and edges, and a near-white highlight at the sharpest edges of the collar. No smooth gradients – leather goes from very dark to bright edge without a long middle transition. Then color the rest of the outfit in deliberate contrast to the jacket: a soft or neutral top underneath, any color jeans, and accessories in gold or silver. Compare your finished leather jacket to real leather jacket reference photos and notice what the color values tell you about the material.
Color the selfie as a social media moment. Print Baddie Girl Selfie. Before you color it, decide: what platform is this selfie for? What’s the lighting aesthetic – bright and warm like a golden-hour Instagram post, or cool and blue-tinted like a TikTok bathroom selfie? Color the entire page in the light temperature you chose: warm amber-gold tones for everything if it’s an Instagram warm-filter moment, or cool blue-tinted shading throughout for the TikTok-bathroom aesthetic. Add a background to the phone screen or suggest a background behind the figure that matches the platform aesthetic. The finished page should read as a specific type of social media image rather than a generic portrait.
Build a seasonal baddie wardrobe. Print Winter Baddie Vibe, Sport Baddie Vibe, Chill Baddie Girl, and Baddie Girl Aesthetic – one page representing each mood or season. Color all four in a consistent skin tone and hair color for the character across all pages, but change the palette of each outfit to match the season or mood: cool blues and whites for winter, bright primary sports tones for sporty, warm neutrals for chill, and your chosen statement palette for the aesthetic page. When all four are finished, they should read as the same girl’s wardrobe across different contexts – the character is consistent, only the situational color palette changes.
