Free Fantasia Coloring Pages: 20+ printable PDF pages featuring Sorcerer Mickey in his red robe and starred hat, Mickey with enchanted magic brooms, Mickey putting on the sorcerer’s hat, the Hippo from Fantasia in her ballet tutu, and a special page showing Sorcerer Mickey with Princess Minnie. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.

Almost every page in this set is a portrait of Mickey in one of Disney’s most iconic costumes: the deep red sorcerer’s robe, the blue pointed hat covered in stars and a crescent moon, and the white gloves. The challenge is not the silhouette, which any Disney fan knows well, but the quality of light. Fantasia’s sorcerer segment is built on the glow of magic: enchanted brooms with glowing yellow eyes, sparks and water flooding a dark stone chamber, a hat that pulses with energy-getting that glow right means coloring the light sources before the shadows.

The pages are divided into two types. Sorcerer Mickey portrait and action pages, Mickey standing in full regalia, Mickey gesturing, Mickey running from the flooding water, reward careful attention to the robe’s deep red, the hat’s star-scattered blue, and the magical effects around him. The broom pages call for different attention: the enchanted brooms are warm wood-brown with glowing amber eyes, and that contrast between ordinary material and magical light is the visual joke. Simpler portrait pages suit younger children; the detailed broom and scene pages give older fans more.

These pages work well at home or as fan art for any viewer of the film. These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Disney or any rights holder of the Fantasia franchise.

Quick Answer

Fantasia coloring pages are a free set of 20+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets featuring Sorcerer Mickey in solo portraits, action poses, and broom scenes, plus the Hippo from Fantasia and a Sorcerer Mickey and Princess Minnie duo page.

Best for: Fantasia fans, Disney fans, Mickey Mouse fans, younger children, older kids, teens, adults, and anyone who enjoys classic Disney magic and sorcerer character coloring

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring

Popular characters: Sorcerer Mickey, Mickey with Magic Broom, Hippo from Fantasia, and Princess Minnie

Creative uses: fan art practice, Sorcerer Mickey portrait study, magic glow effect technique, the Hippo ballet page as a pastel contrast study, and classic Disney displays

What’s Inside Fantasia Coloring Pages

Sorcerer Mickey Solo Pages

Sorcerer Mickey appears across many portrait and pose pages: Awesome Mickey Fantasia, Disney Fantasia Mickey, Fantasia Disney Mickey, Fantasia Magic Mickey Mouse, Fantasia Mickey Magician, Fantasia Mickey Mouse, Fantasia Wizard Mickey, Fantasia Wizard Mickey 1, Mickey Fantasia, Mickey Fantasia Disney, Mickey Magician, Mickey Mouse Magician, Mickey Mouse Magician Fantasia, Mickey Mouse Sorcerer, Sorcerer Mickey Mouse, and Sorcerer Mickey.

Coloring Sorcerer Mickey: the sorcerer costume is Mickey’s most recognizable non-standard outfit, and it has three distinct color elements that all need to be right simultaneously. The robe is a deep, rich red, darker than fire-engine red and warmer than burgundy. The hat is a deep midnight blue, covered in yellow stars and a crescent moon. The gloves stay white. His skin tone is the standard warm Mickey tan. Keep the red and blue from competing by making the robe genuinely dark and the hat genuinely deep: both colors read as intense because of their depth, not their brightness. The white gloves act as the separator between the two.

Mickey and Magic Broom Pages

Mickey appears with the enchanted brooms in three pages: Fantasia Magic Broom, Fantasia Mickey Mouse with Magic Broom, and Mickey Mouse with Magic Broom in Fantasia.

Coloring the broom pages: the enchanted brooms are the set’s most interesting coloring challenge, beyond the costume itself. Each broom is warm tan-brown wood with simple stick arms, but the defining feature is the pair of glowing amber-yellow eyes where the head of the broom meets the handle. Those eyes are the magic made visible: color them a vivid warm amber or yellow, slightly brighter than anything else on the broom, so they read as an internal light source rather than just a painted detail. On pages with water or flooding, the water itself can be colored in a slightly luminous blue-green to reinforce the out-of-control enchantment feeling.

Mickey Putting on the Sorcerer’s Hat

The page Mickey putting on a sorcerer’s hat shows the moment of transformation, Mickey lifting the starred hat onto his head before the chaos begins.

Coloring the hat page: This page works best when the hat reads as the most important object in the composition. Color the hat deep midnight blue with vivid, clearly defined stars first, establish its visual weight, and then fill Mickey and the background around it. The hat should feel heavy with magic even before Mickey puts it on: keep its blue deep and rich, and make the stars bright enough to suggest they are actually glowing.

Sorcerer Mickey and Princess Minnie

The page Sorcerer Mickey and Princess Minnie shows both characters together in a magical context.

Coloring the duo page: Mickey’s deep red robe and Minnie’s typical pink and white palette create a natural complementary pairing. Keep Minnie’s tones soft and feminine, pale pinks and whites, to contrast with the dramatic depth of Mickey’s sorcerer costume. On a shared page, the contrast between Mickey’s dark intensity and Minnie’s lightness makes both characters read more clearly than either would alone.

Hippo from Fantasia

The page Hippo from Fantasia shows the ballet-dancing Hippo from the “Dance of the Hours” segment.

Coloring the Hippo: The ballet hippo is one of Fantasia’s most beloved comic characters. She is a large grey hippopotamus in a lilac or soft pink tutu and matching ballet slippers, performing with complete sincerity. The joke lives entirely in the palette: a massive grey animal in the most delicate pastel ballet costume possible. Keep the Hippo’s body a warm medium grey and the tutu a genuinely soft, pale lilac or pink, so the contrast between the two is as sharp as the comedy. Do not tone the tutu down toward grey: the paler and more ballet-appropriate it looks, the funnier the page becomes.

General and Title Pages

Two pages cover the film more broadly: Fantasia and Disney Fantasia.

Coloring the general pages: these pages likely show multiple elements from the film or a poster-style composition. A warm, illustrative palette drawing on the film’s signature deep blues, rich reds, and warm golds suits the 1940 Disney aesthetic of the source material.

Printable PDF and Online Fantasia Coloring Pages

Every design comes in two ways: a printable PDF for paper, or the same artwork colored on screen.

Using both formats: print the PDF when you want a clean sheet for pencils, markers, or crayons, and use the on-screen version when there is no printer nearby. The PDF holds the film’s expressive character linework and the star detail on the sorcerer’s hat cleanly on standard letter or A4 paper.

What These Pages Do

Fantasia is the Disney film that most directly asks its audience to feel color as an emotional experience rather than a descriptive one. Working through these pages builds a skill the film itself demands: making darkness feel inhabited rather than empty. A deep red that reads as velvet in low light is not the same decision as a bright red, and neither is a midnight blue that carries stars that seem to glow from within. Both require placing the lightest elements first and building the darks around them, which is the opposite of how most people approach a coloring page. That reversal, light before dark, is a genuinely transferable technique for any work involving characters in dramatic or low-key lighting. From here, Disney coloring pages are the parent hub, and Mickey Mouse coloring pages offer the full range of the character beyond the sorcerer costume.

The American Art Therapy Association describes everyday coloring as recreation and self-care rather than clinical therapy. For a Fantasia fan, spending time with Sorcerer Mickey or the Hippo ballet page is a calm, screen-free activity built around one of Disney’s most visually ambitious films. The American Academy of Pediatrics points to creative, imaginative activities as a recognized part of healthy development in children, and the range here, from the simple Mickey portrait pages to the detailed broom and hat pages, gives children of different skill levels something genuinely suited to where they are.

How to Color Fantasia Coloring Pages

These steps work for any page in the set, from a simple Mickey portrait to the full broom scene.

Establish the hat’s deep blue first on any Mickey page. The midnight blue of the sorcerer’s hat sets the emotional tone of the entire page. Fill it early with a deep, rich blue, add the stars in bright yellow, and everything else you color afterward will take its cue from that established intensity.

Keep the robe a dark, warm red, not bright. Sorcerer Mickey’s robe is the red of deep velvet in dim light, not the red of a traffic cone. If the robe reads as bright, the page loses the sense of magical darkness that makes the costume feel powerful. A darker, richer red with only subtle highlights on the raised folds gives the robe its weight.

On broom pages, make the broom eyes glow. Fill the broom body in warm tan-brown, then color the eyes a vivid amber-yellow that is noticeably brighter than the rest of the broom. The contrast between the mundane wood and the glowing eyes is the page’s key detail: it is the moment the ordinary becomes enchanted.

On the Hippo page, keep the tutu pale and delicate. The comedy of the page depends entirely on how unsuitable the tutu looks on a hippo. A pale lilac or soft pink that reads as genuinely ballet-appropriate, next to a solid warm grey hippopotamus, delivers the joke. If the tutu reads as grey or muted, the contrast disappears.

On the duo page, let Minnie’s pale pink rest against Mickey’s deep red. The two characters have naturally complementary palettes: deep, intense red and blue against soft pink and white. Do not push Minnie’s tones toward saturation: her lightness is what makes Mickey’s dramatic depth read correctly beside her.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Fantasia Coloring Pages

Sorcerer Mickey Portrait Study

Color the Sorcerer Mickey page at full intensity: deep warm red robe, midnight blue starred hat, white gloves, warm skin tone.

Mount on a dark card for a fan display that shows the full power of the costume at its most saturated. The project takes about twenty-five minutes and works best with colored pencils or markers that can build up dark tones.

Magic Broom Glow Effect

Color the Fantasia Magic Broom or Mickey Mouse with Magic Broom in the Fantasia page, using warm tan-brown for the broom body and a vivid amber-yellow for the eyes.

Add a thin halo of pale yellow around each eye with a light pencil or gel pen to suggest the glow radiating outward. The project takes about twenty minutes and teaches a simple glow technique applicable to any page with a light source.

Hat Transformation Sequence

Color the Mickey putting on a sorcerer’s hat page, focusing on the hat as the visual center: deep midnight blue, vivid yellow stars, and the sense that it is about to do something.

Mount on a card with the caption “It begins here” for a standalone narrative display. Takes about twenty minutes.

Hippo Ballet Contrast Card

Color the Hippo from Fantasia page using the full contrast palette: warm medium grey for the Hippo’s body, soft pale lilac or pink for the tutu and slippers.

Fold a plain A4 sheet in half, trim the finished page to card front size, and glue it on. Write “The Dance of the Hours” inside for a fan card that takes under twenty minutes.

Sorcerer Mickey and Princess Minnie Display

Color the Sorcerer Mickey and Princess Minnie page, keeping Mickey in his full deep-red-and-midnight-blue palette and Minnie in soft pinks and whites.

Mount on a dark card to show the hero-and-princess contrast pair. The project takes about twenty-five minutes.

FAQ About Fantasia Coloring Pages

Are these Fantasia coloring pages free, and can I color them online? 

Yes. Every page is free, with no account, email, or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or color the design on screen in the browser.

Which characters are included?

The set features Sorcerer Mickey across many portrait and action pages, Mickey with enchanted brooms, the Hippo from Fantasia in her ballet tutu, and a Sorcerer Mickey and Princess Minnie duo page.

What is Fantasia?

Fantasia is a Disney animated film released in 1940, the third Disney animated feature. It combines classical music with animated sequences in an anthology format. The most famous segment is The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, featuring Mickey Mouse as an apprentice who enchants brooms to carry water, only to lose control of the spell. Leopold Stokowski conducted the film and was notable for its pioneering use of stereophonic sound. You can read more on the Wikipedia page.

What colors should I use for Sorcerer Mickey’s costume?

The robe is a deep, dark, warm red, not bright like a traffic light but rich like velvet in low light. The hat is a deep midnight blue with bright yellow stars and a crescent moon. The gloves stay white. Keeping both the red and the blue genuinely dark rather than bright is what gives the costume its dramatic quality.

How do I color the magic broom’s eyes?

Use a warm tan-brown for the broom’s body, then give the eyes a vivid amber-yellow that reads noticeably brighter than the wood around them. Adding a thin pale yellow halo around each eye with a light pencil or gel pen strengthens the glowing effect further.

What colors does the Hippo from Fantasia wear?

The Hippo wears a soft, pale lilac or pink ballet tutu with matching slippers. Her body is warm medium grey. The comedy depends entirely on the contrast between the delicate pastel tutu and the large grey body: keep the tutu genuinely pale and ballet-appropriate.

Are there pages for younger children?

Yes. The simpler Sorcerer Mickey portrait pages suit younger children well. The detailed broom, flooding, and hat pages are better suited to older fans who want to work with more complex lighting effects.

Is the Hippo from Fantasia included?

Yes. The Hippo from Fantasia page shows the ballet-dancing Hippo from the “Dance of the Hours” segment. It is the only non-Mickey character page in the set and one of the most distinctive pages for its pastel-versus-grey contrast.

Are these official Disney coloring pages?

No. They are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with Disney or any rights holder of the Fantasia franchise.

What crafts can I make with these pages?

Popular options include a Sorcerer Mickey portrait study, a magic broom glow effect, a hat transformation sequence, a Hippo ballet contrast card, and a Sorcerer Mickey and Princess Minnie display.

More Disney and Classic Animation Coloring Pages

Browse the full set at ColoringPagesOnly.com, then open any design to print it or color it on screen.

These pages suit home use and fan creative sessions for all ages. They are fan-made coloring designs and are not official products of Disney.

For the final pass: keep the robe deep, warm red, the hat midnight blue with bright stars, and on broom pages make the eyes glow amber against the tan-brown wood. Those three notes cover the most important coloring decisions in the set.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We would love to see your sorcerer portraits, broom glow studies, and Hippo ballet cards.

These related coloring collections will help you explore the wonderful world of colors. 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.