Disenchantment coloring pages: 25+ printable PDF designs from Matt Groening’s Netflix animated fantasy series, featuring the three main characters: Princess Bean, her elf companion Elfo, and her personal demon Luci. Every page can be downloaded as a PDF to print or colored online in the browser.
Disenchantment ran for five parts on Netflix between 2018 and 2023. It is set in the fictional medieval kingdom of Dreamland. It follows Bean, a rebellious 19-year-old princess who refuses the arranged marriage her father, King Zog, plans for her, alongside Elfo, a lime-green elf who left his sheltered home in Elfwood to experience something beyond mandatory happiness, and Luci, a flat, all-black demon assigned to lead Bean toward trouble who ends up protecting her instead.
This set suits fans of the show at any age, anyone who follows Matt Groening’s other work (The Simpsons and Futurama), and older kids and adults looking for a fantasy-themed coloring collection with a darker, drier sense of humor than most animated series. The pages include solo portraits, group scenes, and supporting cast appearances from King Zog, Queen Dagmar, and Mora the Mermaid.
These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Netflix, Matt Groening, Rough Draft Studios, or any other rights holder of Disenchantment.
Quick Answer
Disenchantment coloring pages are a free set of 25+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets from Matt Groening’s Netflix medieval fantasy series, featuring Princess Bean, the elf Elfo, the demon Luci, and supporting characters including King Zog, Queen Dagmar, and Mora.
Best for: Disenchantment fans, Matt Groening series fans, older kids, and adults
Formats: printable PDF and online coloring
Popular pages: Bean, Luci, Elfo, and group scenes with all three
Creative uses: scene comic, character trio bookmark set, a Dreamland greeting card
What’s Inside Disenchantment Coloring Pages
The set covers the main trio across solo pages and group scenes, plus several supporting characters who appear in the series’ ongoing story.
Princess Bean Pages
Bean appears in the largest number of pages, shown solo, in scenes with Luci, with Elfo, with her mother Queen Dagmar, and with Mora.
Coloring Bean: her signature look is a cyan tunic with white short sleeves, brown leggings, tied dark brown boots, and a belt with a silver buckle. Her hair is long and white (described in the show as the same shade as her mother Dagmar’s), with freckles on her face. The cyan tunic is the one color that keeps her recognizable across every page and every scene.
Elfo Pages
Elfo appears solo and in group scenes with Bean and Luci.
Coloring Elfo: Elfo has lime-green skin and lime-green hair spikes on his head, making him one of the most unusually colored characters in the set. He wears an orange-tinted tunic, dark teal shorts, and brown clogs. The lime green covers his entire body, not just his clothing, so the skin color is the first thing to establish on any Elfo page.
Luci Pages
Luci appears solo and in group scenes. Of the three main characters, he presents the most unusual coloring task in the set.
Coloring Luci: Luci is a nearly all-black figure with a single large white eye, two small horns, and a spearhead tail. There is almost no other color to add. The coloring challenge is not which colors to use but how to give a flat, all-black figure any sense of depth. A very dark cool-gray on the shaded side of his body, with true black only on the front face, creates a subtle dimension that makes him read as a three-dimensional figure rather than a silhouette.
King Zog and Supporting Cast Pages
King Zog appears in several pages, including the group scenes. Queen Dagmar, Odval (the three-eyed prime minister), and Mora the Mermaid round out the supporting cast in the set.
Coloring the supporting cast: King Zog is a large, physically imposing man in regal clothing, so rich reds and golds suit him better than muted tones. Odval is best known for his three eyes, so giving all three a consistent color is the detail that makes him recognizable at a glance.
Group Scenes
Several pages show Bean, Elfo, and Luci together. The “Queen Bean, Elfo and Luci” and “Bunty doing Bean’s hair” pages are among the most detailed in the set.
Coloring group scenes: because Luci is almost entirely black, he will disappear into any dark background. Keep the background behind Luci lighter, or leave it white, so the edge of his figure still reads as a character rather than merging into the surroundings.
Printable PDF and Online Disenchantment Coloring Pages
Every design in this set is available as a printable PDF or as an online coloring page in the browser.
Using both formats: solo Bean and Elfo pages are well matched for a shorter online session. Group scenes and the more detailed Luci pages work better as printed pages with a full pencil set, since Luci’s shading requires layering multiple pencil passes that are harder to achieve with a mouse or stylus.
What These Pages Do
Three of the most visually distinctive characters in current adult animation are in this set, and each one asks something different of the person coloring it.
Bean is the most straightforward of the three. However, her palette is still specific: the show maintains a consistent cyan-white-brown-brown combination across all seasons and merchandise, so getting it right gives a page an “officially correct” look that getting it slightly wrong does not.
Elfo’s lime-green skin is one of the most unusual base colors in the Groening universe. Unlike the Simpsons’ well-known yellow, Elfo’s lime green has no real-world skin color reference to anchor it, which means the choice is entirely the colorist’s interpretation. A bright, true lime gives a cheerful, childlike impression consistent with his character. A more muted, olive-tinted green produces a different one.
Luci is the real challenge in this set. He is almost entirely black, flat, and depthless by design. The task is the inverse of most coloring problems. Instead of choosing from a range of colors, you are working with almost none, and the goal is to give black a visual texture and depth without losing its deliberately shadow-like quality.
Older teens are this set’s natural audience. Disenchantment is TV-14, and its humor and storylines are built for adolescent and adult viewers. The American Academy of Pediatrics has noted in its guidelines on media and adolescent development that older teens benefit from engaging with complex, serialized narratives that explore themes of identity, belonging, and resistance to authority, all of which are central to what Disenchantment is about. Coloring these characters is one low-pressure way to stay inside that world.
Working in near-black tonal gradients has its own therapeutic dimension. Art therapy practitioners recognize that working with a highly restricted tonal range, specifically the kind of close-value shading that Luci requires, demands a slower, more observational pace than full-color work. That deliberate attention to subtle value shifts is what practitioners describe as the meditative quality of monochromatic and near-monochromatic mark-making: the focus narrows, external noise recedes, and the page becomes the only thing in the room.
How to Color Disenchantment Coloring Pages Well
Work from the background and supporting cast inward toward the main trio, leaving Bean, Elfo, and Luci for last so their specific colors stay accurate once everything around them is in.
Start Bean’s page with the cyan tunic before anything else. The tunic dominates the composition, so getting that color anchored first makes every other color decision easier—Brown for boots and leggings, white for sleeves, and silver for the belt rather than gold.
Lay down Elfo’s lime-green skin as a flat base coat before adding any shading. Because his skin and hair are the same lime color, covering the body and head uniformly first prevents gaps and makes the later shading easier to manage.
For Luci, use cool-gray on the shaded side of the body, not black. True black on both sides flattens him completely. A cool gray-black on the shadow side and true black on the lit side produces a subtle roundness that keeps him from looking like a cutout. The single white eye is the one accent that should stay pure white.
On group pages, keep the background near Luci light. A dark or heavily shaded background behind Luci will absorb his silhouette. A pale stone-wall gray or light sky color behind him keeps his edges visible and readable.
Give King Zog a deep burgundy-red robe with gold trim. His regal bulk reads best in rich, heavy tones. Pale or pastel colors work against his character.
On pages where Bean appears with Dagmar, keep their hair the same shade. In the show, both have the same long, white hair, which is a visual cue to their family connection. Coloring them differently loses that narrative detail.
5 Creative Craft Ideas with Disenchantment Coloring Pages
Dreamland Greeting Card
Color a Bean and Elfo page, fold a piece of card, glue the colored page to the front, and write “Greetings from Dreamland!” inside.
A quick card for a fan of the show. Takes about ten minutes.
Trio Bookmark Set
Color one Bean page, one Elfo page, and one Luci page, trim each into a narrow strip, and back each one with cardboard.
A set of three bookmarks: one for each member of the trio. Takes about fifteen minutes.
Luci Shadow Puppet
Color a solo Luci page, cut around his outline, and tape him to a thin stick. Hold the cutout up against a blank wall and shine a light from behind to cast his actual shadow.
A natural extension of what Luci already looks like, since he is designed to resemble a shadow. Takes about ten minutes.
Dreamland Scene Comic
Color two or three pages that show Bean, Elfo, and Luci in different situations, cut out simple speech bubbles from white paper, write a short exchange, and tape the bubbles over the characters.
A way to create a short narrative from finished pages. Takes about fifteen minutes.
Character Portrait Series
Color one solo page each of Bean, Elfo, Luci, and King Zog, then line them up in a row and frame or display them together as a character cast wall.
A simple display that works as a completed series rather than individual pages. Takes about thirty minutes total.
FAQ About Disenchantment Coloring Pages
Are these Disenchantment coloring pages free, and can I color them online?
Yes. Every page is free, with no sign-in or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or color it directly on screen in the browser.
What is Disenchantment?
Disenchantment is an animated fantasy series created by Matt Groening for Netflix, set in the fictional medieval kingdom of Dreamland. It follows Princess Bean, a rebellious young princess who refuses an arranged marriage, alongside her elf companion Elfo and her personal demon Luci. The series ran for five parts, totaling 50 episodes, from August 2018 through September 2023. It is Groening’s third animated series, after The Simpsons and Futurama.
Why is Luci so hard to color, and how do you make him look right?
Luci is designed as a nearly flat, all-black shadow-like figure with a single large white eye, two small horns, and a spearhead tail. Most of the coloring challenge is creating depth without changing his color: using a cool dark gray on one side of the body and true black on the other gives a subtle sense of roundness. Keeping the background behind him light rather than dark stops him from disappearing into it.
What colors does Princess Bean wear?
Bean’s signature outfit is a cyan tunic with white short sleeves, brown leggings, tied dark brown boots, and a belt with a silver buckle. Her hair is long and white. This combination stays consistent across all five parts of the series and across official merchandise.
What color is Elfo?
Elfo has lime-green skin that covers his entire body, lime-green hair spikes, an orange-tinted tunic, dark teal shorts, and brown clogs. The lime green is his most distinctive and unusual feature, with no real-world skin color reference, which makes it one of the more creative coloring decisions in the set.
Who appears in this set besides Bean, Elfo, and Luci?
The set also includes King Zog (Bean’s father and King of Dreamland), Queen Dagmar (Bean’s mother), Odval (the three-eyed prime minister), Mora (Bean’s mermaid love interest from the later parts of the series), and Bunty (Bean’s lady-in-waiting).
Is Disenchantment suitable for children?
Disenchantment is a TV-14 rated series on Netflix, intended for older teens and adults. The coloring pages themselves depict the characters in ways that are generally suitable for older children who know the show. Parents of younger children may want to preview the pages first, as some include the character Luci, who is a demon, and scenes that reference the show’s darker humor.
Are these official Disenchantment coloring pages?
No. These are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with, licensed by, or endorsed by Netflix, Matt Groening, Rough Draft Studios, or any other rights holder of Disenchantment.
Start Coloring
Download any page by clicking the design. No account, email, or payment is required. Pages print directly from the browser at full resolution or open in the online coloring tool for screen use. Share finished pages on Facebook or Pinterest with the share buttons at the top of each design page.
