Free Fairly OddParents coloring pages – 50+ pages featuring Timmy Turner, Cosmo, Wanda, Vicky, Poof, Sparky, Foop, Crimson Chin, Chester McBadbat, Tootie, Chloe Carmichael, and the full cast of Butch Hartman’s beloved Nickelodeon series – free printable PDF and online coloring for kids and nostalgic adults.

The Fairly OddParents began as a series of short segments on Nickelodeon’s anthology show Oh Yeah! Cartoons in 1998, before becoming a full series on March 30, 2001. At its peak, it was one of Nickelodeon’s highest-rated animated programs, running for ten seasons through 2017. The show’s central premise – a miserable 10-year-old named Timmy Turner is granted two fairy godparents who grant his wishes, which consistently backfire in spectacular fashion – is simple enough to explain in a sentence and rich enough to sustain nearly 200 episodes of increasingly elaborate magical chaos.

In September 2023, Paramount+ launched a live-action hybrid revival series, bringing the franchise to a new generation while the original show’s fanbase remains enormous. Adults who grew up with Timmy, Cosmo, and Wanda in the early 2000s are now introducing the series to their own children.

These 50+ free pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com cover the full cast across every era of the show. All free, PDF or PNG, print or color online. Poof!

What’s Inside

Timmy Turner – The Boy with the Pink Hat

Timmy Turner from The Fairly OddParents, Timmy Turner – Fairly OddParents, Timmy Turner Smile, Timmy Turner Running, Timmy Smiling, Funny Timmy Turner, Cute Timmy, Cute Timmy Turner, Fairly OddParents – Timmy Turner, and multiple group pages all feature the show’s protagonist – a 10-year-old boy living in Dimmsdale, California, whose parents are oblivious, whose babysitter Vicky is genuinely terrible, and whose school teacher Mr. Crocker gives nothing but F grades while shouting “FAIRY GODPARENTS!” at random intervals.

Timmy’s design is one of Nickelodeon animation’s most immediately recognizable: the pink baseball cap worn backward, the blue shirt, the brown hair poking out around the edges of the hat. His expression in most pages captures the particular combination of optimism and impending disaster that defines the character – he is always about to wish for something that seems like a good idea.

The Timmy Turner Running page is the one that most captures his defining mode of existence: actively fleeing the consequences of a wish gone wrong.

Coloring tip: Timmy’s pink hat is a warm, medium pink – not pale baby pink, not vivid magenta, but the specific warm pink that is immediately “Timmy’s hat” to anyone who knows the show. His shirt is a true, bright blue. Brown hair. These three colors – pink, blue, brown – are the character’s entire visual identity, and getting all three right makes any Timmy page instantly recognizable.

Cosmo – The One Who Makes Things Worse

Cosmo from Fairly OddParents, Cosmo – Fairly OddParents, Fairly OddParents – Cosmo, Happy Cosmo 1, Cosmo with Wanda, Cosmo and Wanda, Wanda with Cosmo, and Wanda and Cosmo give Cosmo substantial representation across the collection – which is appropriate, because Cosmo is the character most responsible for wish complications.

Cosmo Julius Cosma is Timmy’s male fairy godparent – dim-witted, well-meaning, and constitutionally incapable of thinking through the consequences of anything. He has been married to Wanda for approximately 10,000 years, which represents an extraordinary commitment on Wanda’s part, given Cosmo’s demonstrated reasoning abilities. He has green hair, green fairy wings, and wears a black tuxedo-style fairy outfit. His wand produces a green star when granting wishes.

The show makes Cosmo genuinely funny rather than simply stupid – there is a specific kind of cheerful, catastrophically confident idiocy in his character that writers Butch Hartman and the team developed consistently across ten seasons. His relationship with Wanda is one of the more honestly affectionate animated couples of the early 2000s, which is a sentence nobody expected to write about this show.

Coloring tip: Cosmo’s green is a medium, bright, distinctly warm green – not forest green, not lime, but the specific shade associated with Nickelodeon animation’s tendency toward vivid, saturated character colors. His skin tone is a warm peach. The tuxedo jacket is solid black. The wings are a slightly lighter, more translucent green than the hair.

Wanda – The One Who Knows Better

Wanda Fairywinkle, Wanda – Fairly OddParents, Fairly OddParents – Wanda, Happy Wanda, Wanda, Timmy Turner and Cosmo, Timmy Turner, Cosmo, Wanda, Timmy Turner, Cosmo and Wanda, Timmy Turner with Cosmo and Wanda, and Timmy Turner, Wanda, Cosmo and Vicky give Wanda extensive coverage.

Wanda Venus Fairywinkle-Cosma is the sensible half of the fairy godparent pair – intuitive, emotionally competent, and perpetually trying to talk Timmy out of wishes she already knows will backfire. She has pink hair, a yellow star wand, and wears the same black tuxedo style as Cosmo. Her expressions in the coloring pages range from warm encouragement (the pages where things are going well) to a particular kind of resigned patience (the pages where she’s already seen what’s coming).

She has been one of animated television’s more understated feminist figures – the competent, emotionally intelligent character who is consistently right and consistently overruled by the males around her, played entirely for comedy rather than drama, which somehow makes her more effective at both.

Coloring tip: Wanda’s pink hair is a vivid, warm pink – slightly more saturated than Timmy’s hat, distinctly warmer than a cool fuchsia. Her eyes are blue. The yellow star elements – wand tip, crown detail – are a bright, warm yellow. The contrast between Cosmo’s greens and Wanda’s pinks is one of the show’s most satisfying color pairings.

Vicky – The Legitimate Antagonist

Vicky from The Fairly OddParents, Vicky from Fairly Oddparents, and Vicky – Fairly OddParents give three pages to the show’s primary human antagonist – Timmy’s babysitter, who is sixteen years old and has apparently been given complete authority over his life by his oblivious parents.

Vicky is mean. Not cartoonishly mean in a way that undermines the stakes – genuinely mean in a way that earns every wish Timmy makes to escape her. Red hair, green shirt, purple pants. She has two expressions in the show: the menacing grin she wears when Timmy’s parents are absent, and the angelic smile she deploys when adults are present. The coloring pages capture the first mode.

Her younger sister Tootie – who appears in the Tootie from Fairly OddParents page – is her complete opposite: small, sweet, obsessed with Timmy Turner, and perpetually optimistic in circumstances that would break a lesser character.

Coloring tip: Vicky’s red hair is a vivid, slightly orange-tinted red – not auburn, not dark burgundy, but a bright, antagonist-appropriate red. The contrast between the red hair and green shirt is the show’s way of making her visually pop against backgrounds. Her shirt is a bright Kelly green.

Poof, Foop, and Sparky – The Later Additions

Poof from Fairly OddParents and Angry Poof introduce Cosmo and Wanda’s baby, who was born in Season 6 (2008) as one of the most significant plot developments in the show’s history – fairies had not produced a baby in 10,000 years, and Poof’s birth involved a prophecy suggesting the baby’s emotional state would affect the world’s weather. He has purple hair, a purple diaper, and tiny wings. His rattle becomes his wand. He is consistently the most competent magic-user in the family.

Foop from Fairly OddParents is Poof’s nemesis from Anti-Fairy World – the Anti-Poof, counterpart to Poof in the same way that Anti-Cosmo and Anti-Wanda are counterparts to Cosmo and Wanda. Where Poof is round and purple, Foop is square-shaped (an anti-fairy geometric inversion) and dark. He considers himself a great villain. His relationship to Poof is one of the show’s more interesting late-series creative choices.

Sparky from The Fairly Oddparents and Sparky – The Fairly Oddparents introduce Timmy’s fairy dog, added in Season 9 (2013). Sparky was controversial among the show’s fanbase – adding a dog character to an established cast dynamic is a specific kind of creative decision that audiences tend to have strong feelings about. He is yellow, energetic, and capable of granting wishes like a conventional fairy, which raised structural questions about the show’s rules that the writers addressed with varying degrees of success.

Supporting Cast – Chester, Tootie, Chloe, Crimson Chin, and More

Chester McBadbat and Happy Chester McBadbat give pages to Timmy’s best friend – identified primarily by his braces and his genuine poverty, which the show handles with a surprisingly light touch. His father is a washed-up baseball player; Chester has absorbed this without bitterness.

Tootie from Fairly OddParents – Vicky’s younger sister, who has a significant crush on Timmy and appears across many episodes in a subplot that the show mostly plays for comedy before giving it a genuine resolution in later seasons.

Chloe Carmichael was introduced in Season 10 (2016) as a character who shares Cosmo and Wanda’s time with Timmy – an overachiever whose problems are the opposite of Timmy’s (too much parental attention, not too little) but who is equally in need of fairy help. Her addition generated discussion about whether the show had fundamentally changed its formula; her page gives the character a solo representation.

Crimson Chin is the show’s fictional comic book superhero – a character Timmy worships who exists within the pages of a comic book before being wished into the real world in various episodes. He has a large, extremely prominent chin, a red superhero costume, and the genuine heroic earnestness of a character who has never encountered irony. His page is the collection’s most purely superhero-styled coloring challenge.

Schnozmo Cosma is Cosmo’s brother – a con-artist fairy who appeared across several episodes and whose family resemblance to Cosmo extends to his reasoning abilities. Alan Jhons (likely referencing a minor character from the series’ universe).

Mrs. Turner and Mr. Turner complete the family – Timmy’s parents, who are loving but constitute a specific type of adult obliviousness that the show satirizes gently throughout its run.

The Wanda, Timmy Turner, and Cosmo, Timmy Turner, Wanda, Cosmo, and Vicky, and Timmy, Cosmo, Wanda, Poof group pages bring the core cast together in the multi-character compositions that are the most demanding pages in the collection.

What These Pages Do

The show’s premise rewards conversation. The Fairly OddParents is built on a premise that generates natural discussion with children: what would you wish for if you had fairy godparents? What would go wrong? The show’s consistent structural joke – wishes backfire in proportion to how poorly thought through they were – teaches something real about the difference between what we want and what we actually need, and between short-term and long-term thinking. A parent and child coloring the Timmy and Cosmo page while talking about what wish they’d make is a surprisingly rich conversation starter.

The character design teaches color relationships. The show’s palette is one of Nickelodeon animation’s more deliberately constructed: Timmy’s warm pink and blue, Cosmo’s green, Wanda’s pink (different from Timmy’s hat), Vicky’s red-and-green. These are not random color choices – they are designed to make characters immediately distinguishable from each other and from backgrounds. Coloring them carefully while thinking about why each character has their specific colors builds genuine color intuition.

Fine motor development through fairy design elements. The wings are the most demanding coloring element in this collection – delicate, semi-transparent structures that require careful, light application to avoid the heavy solidity that would make them look like solid shapes rather than fairy wings. The wands, the crowns, and the small detail elements reward precision and develop the controlled pencil pressure that the American Academy of Pediatrics identifies as a key fine motor milestone.

Nostalgia serves a real purpose. For adult fans who grew up with the show in the early 2000s, these pages create a meaningful creative connection to a specific period of childhood. The 2005 Art Therapy Journal study on structured coloring reducing anxiety applies across all ages, and the additional emotional dimension of engaging with genuinely beloved childhood characters amplifies the calming, focused quality of the activity.

How to Color These Pages Well

Fairy wings are transparent, not solid. The most common mistake when coloring Cosmo and Wanda is treating their wings as solid colored shapes. Real fairy wings – and the show’s animated wings – are semi-transparent, catching light differently from the body. Apply the wing color very lightly, in thin layers, rather than with full-coverage pressure. Leave subtle lighter areas where the wing’s surface would catch light. The goal is a wing that looks delicate and weightworthy rather than a solid green or pink blob attached to the character’s back.

Timmy’s pink hat is specific. Test your pink on scrap paper first. It should be warm, leaning slightly orange rather than cool. It should be medium saturation – vivid enough to be clearly pink, not so vivid it reads as hot pink. Faber-Castell’s “Rose Carmine” or Prismacolor’s “Blush Pink” are closer to most standard pinks. Get it right, and every Timmy page is immediately recognizable; get it wrong, and the character reads as generic.

Vicky’s expressions deserve maximum commitment. The Vicky pages show her at her most antagonistic, which is the most interesting mode for coloring. Apply her red hair with full saturation and confidence: don’t hedge toward a softer tone. The green shirt should be equally vivid, creating the warm-cool contrast that makes her read as visually aggressive. Her expressions, colored without restraint, are the most dramatically satisfying pages in the collection.

For the group pages, establish each character’s dominant color before proceeding. On pages featuring Timmy, Cosmo, and Wanda together, the three dominant colors – blue (Timmy’s shirt), green (Cosmo), pink (Wanda’s hair) – need to be clearly distinct from each other. If any two of these colors blend into each other, the characters stop reading as separate. Color each character’s primary tone in full before adding secondary colors or details, and verify that the three primaries are clearly distinguishable.

Poof’s purple and Foop’s dark are deliberate opposites. When coloring both characters, leaning into the contrast is the right instinct: Poof in the warmest, most vivid purple available, Foop in a cool, slightly desaturated dark blue-black. The visual opposition between them reinforces their narrative opposition.

5 Creative Craft Ideas

Fairy Godparent Wish Book

Make a handmade book that combines the coloring activity with the show’s central premise – a record of wishes, illustrated with characters from the collection.

Print five or six character pages and color them carefully. Fold three or four sheets of A4 paper in half and staple along the fold to create a small booklet. Cut out the colored character figures and glue one to the cover – the Timmy, Cosmo, and Wanda trio page is ideal. Title the cover: “My Wish Book” in bold marker.

Inside, rule each page into two sections. In the top section, write a wish. In the bottom section, draw or write what goes wrong when the wish is granted (per the show’s formula). Use additional colored character cutouts to illustrate the scenarios throughout.

The finished wish book is a creative writing and illustration project that uses the show’s premise as scaffolding – children who love the series already understand the rules and generate wish-backfire scenarios with impressive enthusiasm.

Character Color Reference Card Set

This craft doubles as a fan art reference tool. Print each main character page individually. Color each one with maximum accuracy to the show’s canonical colors – using reference screenshots if needed. On the back of each colored page, write the character name, their relationship to Timmy, and three color notes: primary color, secondary color, and accent detail.

Mount each finished page on a slightly larger piece of cardstock as a border. Punch a hole in the corner and bind the set together with a binder ring.

The finished card set is a complete character reference guide for anyone wanting to draw or color the show’s characters accurately – useful for fan art projects beyond this specific collection, and impressive as a display of how much the maker knows about the show.

Fairly OddParents Birthday Party Decorations

Print the largest group pages at full size and color them with maximum saturation – these become wall posters. Print medium-size individual character pages, color them, and cut out the figures for smaller table decorations. Print the smallest versions of character heads at 25% size for cupcake toppers, cut them out, and attach to toothpicks with hot glue.

Three scales of the same material – wall, table, cupcake – create a visually coherent party environment that is more personal and more colorful than commercial Nickelodeon merchandise. The consistent color palette across all three scales (same pink hat, same green fairy, same pink fairy at every size) gives the decoration a designed quality that looks intentional.

Wand and Crown Costume Props

The Cosmo and Wanda pages include their wands – the star-tipped wands that are the fairies’ most recognizable accessories. This craft makes functional costume props from the coloring pages.

Print the wand detail from the Cosmo and Wanda pages enlarged to approximately 150% of normal size. Color the wand carefully – Cosmo’s wand has a green star tip, Wanda’s has a yellow star tip. Cut the wand shape out of the colored paper. Glue it to a piece of cardboard cut to the same shape for rigidity. Attach a 30cm wooden dowel rod to the back with strong tape.

For a crown to accompany the wand, print and color the character pages that show crown details on Cosmo and Wanda, cut the crown shapes out, adjust to fit a child’s head, and staple or tape at the back. The combination of colored-paper wand and crown makes a complete fairy godparent costume prop that actually looks like the show.

Dimmsdale Storyboard

This is the most ambitious project in the collection. It requires multiple pages printed and colored, then assembled into a sequential visual narrative on a large backing sheet.

Choose a simple story premise: Timmy wishes for something (choose your own wish). Wish goes wrong. Cosmo and Wanda help fix it. Resolution. Four scenes.

Print and color four to six character pages that fit each scene. Cut out the characters. On a large sheet of poster board, divide the surface into four panels with a black marker line. In each panel, arrange the relevant characters on a sketched background – living room, school, outside, fairy world – and glue them in place. Add speech bubbles with hand-lettered dialogue above each character.

The finished storyboard is an illustrated story that the child both drew (by coloring) and wrote (the speech bubbles and scenario). Teachers consistently identify this kind of multi-step creative project – combining visual art, narrative structure, and character knowledge – as one of the highest-value activities available at the elementary school level.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who created The Fairly OddParents, and when did it first air? The Fairly OddParents was created by Butch Hartman, who also created Danny Phantom and T.U.F.F. Puppy for Nickelodeon. The characters first appeared in a short segment on Nickelodeon’s anthology show Oh Yeah! Cartoons in 1998. The full series premiered on March 30, 2001, and ran for ten seasons until July 26, 2017. At its peak, it was Nickelodeon’s second-highest-rated original cartoon, behind only SpongeBob SquarePants.

What is the show about, and who are the main characters? A 10-year-old boy named Timmy Turner lives in Dimmsdale, California. His parents are loving but oblivious, his babysitter, Vicky, is genuinely cruel, and his school teacher, Mr. Crocker, gives nothing but F grades. Timmy is granted two fairy godparents – Cosmo and Wanda – who can grant him any wish. The show’s central joke is that Timmy’s wishes consistently backfire due to incomplete thinking, creating problems he then has to solve through a combination of additional wishing and personal effort. Supporting characters include Chester McBadbat (best friend), Trixie Tang (love interest), and Tootie (Vicky’s younger sister, who has a crush on Timmy).

Who are Cosmo and Wanda? Cosmo Julius Cosma and Wanda Venus Fairywinkle-Cosma are Timmy’s fairy godparents – small fairies who live in Timmy’s fishbowl, disguised as goldfish when adults are present, and appear as tiny winged people when adults leave. Cosmo (green hair, green wings) is dim-witted, well-meaning, and responsible for approximately 70% of wish complications through enthusiastic but poorly considered execution. Wanda (pink hair, yellow star wand) is sensible, emotionally competent, and perpetually trying to prevent disasters that Cosmo has already set in motion. They have been married for approximately 10,000 years.

Who is Poof, and when was he introduced? Poof is Cosmo and Wanda’s baby, born in the Season 6 episode “Fairly Odd Baby” (2008). His birth was significant because fairies had not produced offspring in 10,000 years. He has purple hair and a purple diaper, uses a rattle as his wand, and is the most powerful magic-user in the family despite being an infant. His negative emotions affect global weather, which the show uses as a recurring plot element. His nemesis Foop – the Anti-Poof from Anti-Fairy World – is square-shaped, dark, and considers himself a great villain.

What is the 2023 Paramount+ revival? A Fairly OddParents: Fairly OddParents! premiered on Paramount+ on September 28, 2023, as a live-action/animation hybrid series. The show reimagines the franchise with a new human child – a girl named Hazel – receiving Cosmo and Wanda as godparents after Timmy Turner, now a teenager, passes them on. The revival was created to introduce the franchise to a new generation, while the original animated series continues to find audiences through streaming. Cosmo and Wanda appear as animated characters interacting with live-action humans, a format that references the original show’s animation style while updating the production approach.

What are the canonical colors for the main characters? Timmy Turner: pink baseball cap (warm medium pink), bright blue shirt, brown hair, peach skin. Cosmo: bright green hair, green wings, black tuxedo fairy outfit, green star wand. Wanda: vivid warm pink hair, black tuxedo fairy outfit, yellow star wand, yellow crown detail, blue eyes. Vicky: vivid red-orange hair, Kelly green shirt, purple pants. Poof: purple hair, purple diaper, small purple wings. Foop: dark blue-black, square shape, anti-fairy wings. Crimson Chin: red superhero costume, enormous prominent chin, blue eyes.

What age group are these coloring pages best suited for? The simple character portrait pages – individual Timmy, Cosmo, and Wanda pages – work well from ages 3–5, particularly for children who watch the show and recognize the characters immediately. The group pages with multiple characters require fine motor control that develops from around age 6–7. The Crimson Chin, Foop, and more detailed costume pages are most rewarding for ages 7 and up. Adults who grew up watching the show in the early 2000s find significant nostalgic value in the full collection, and the wish book and storyboard craft projects are genuinely engaging for adult fans who want a more involved creative activity.

Browse the full collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com. All 50+ pages free, no sign-up, PDF or PNG, print at home or color online directly in your browser.

The Fairly OddParents ran for 16 years across ten seasons on the strength of one very good premise and a cast of characters specific enough to feel real. Timmy is not just “a kid” – he is specifically a kid whose parents are too distracted to notice him and whose babysitter is genuinely terrible, which is a specific kind of childhood loneliness that the show wraps in bright colors and magical comedy without ever making it feel heavy. Cosmo and Wanda are not just “wish-granters” – they are the loving, attentive, imperfect parental figures that Timmy actually needed.

Pick up your colors. Start with the pink hat. The magic follows.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #Coloringpagesonly. We especially want to see the wish books and the storyboard projects.

Color the wish. Brace for consequences. Find your fairy godparents.

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