Flintstones coloring pages: 90+ free printable PDF designs covering Fred Flintstone in dozens of everyday moods, Fred with family and friends, Wilma and Pebbles, full family and neighbor portraits, and a few special character and holiday scenes. Every page is available as a printable PDF or to color in the browser, with no account required.
The Flintstones holds a genuinely significant title in television history. When it premiered in 1960, it was the first animated series to air in American primetime, years before anything like it existed on network TV. The show was also famously close in spirit to “The Honeymooners,” close enough that Jackie Gleason reportedly considered suing over the resemblance before deciding against it, after being asked whether he really wanted to be remembered as the man who got a beloved children’s show pulled off the air.
These pages suit longtime fans who grew up with the original series, kids meeting Bedrock for the first time, and families who enjoy a cartoon that’s been part of pop culture for well over sixty years.
One detail worth noticing in this particular set: it treats Fred less like an action figure and more like a mood board. Dizzy, asleep on the sofa, painting, dancing, on the phone, throwing a hat, there are far more small, everyday moments here than big dramatic poses, which actually fits the show’s original premise better than a set full of action scenes would. The Flintstones was always a domestic sitcom first, just one set in the Stone Age.
Quick Answer
Flintstones coloring pages are a free set of 90+ printable PDFs and browser-based coloring sheets covering Fred Flintstone’s everyday moments, Fred with family and friends, Wilma and Pebbles, full family and neighbor portraits, and special character and holiday scenes.
Best for: children aged 3 and up, longtime fans of the original series, and families looking for a classic, multi-generational cartoon
Formats: printable PDF and online coloring
Popular pages: the full Flintstone family portrait, Fred and Barney together, Pebbles playing, and the Great Gazoo
Creative uses: a Fred’s-day mood board, a family portrait gallery, a who’s-who character card, and a Valentine’s Day card
What’s Inside Flintstones Coloring Pages
Fred Flintstone Solo Portraits
By far the largest group in the set follows Fred through dozens of small, individual moments: dizzy, asleep, painting, dancing, jumping, on the phone, holding a bag or a stick, standing, smiling, and running, among many others.
Since this group is built around mood rather than action, matching the color energy to the specific moment matters more than any single accurate palette. A sleeping pose suits calmer, muted tones; a dancing or jumping pose suits something brighter and more energetic.
Fred with Family and Friends
This group shows Fred alongside the people (and pets) around him: talking with Wilma, standing with Barney, dancing with Betty, playing with Pebbles, and spending time with Dino and Baby Puss.
Keeping each figure’s expression and posture distinct from the others is what makes a duo or group page read as a real interaction rather than two identical figures standing next to each other.
Wilma and Pebbles Portraits
A dedicated group covers Wilma and the youngest Flintstone: Wilma surprised, holding stones, drying pebbles, and dancing with Betty, alongside Pebbles sitting, riding Dino, playing, crying, and spending time with Bamm-Bamm Rubble.
These pages lean quieter and more domestic than Fred’s solo group, which fits their place in the show: home-centered scenes rather than the louder physical comedy Fred usually gets.
Family and Neighbor Group Portraits
A smaller group steps back for the wider view: the full Flintstone family together, the Rubble family as a unit, and a couple of generic, flexible portraits built for printing.
These are the pages worth choosing first if the goal is a single image representing the whole show, since they include every core character in one frame rather than following just one storyline.
Special Characters and Holiday Scenes
A handful of pages step outside the everyday: the Great Gazoo, the show’s small green alien character introduced in its later run, a scared Dino, and a Valentine’s Day-themed page.
The Great Gazoo page is the most visually distinct entry in the whole set, since nothing else in the collection looks quite like him, which makes him worth a genuinely different color approach than the rest of the family.
What These Pages Do
The Flintstones carries real television history most fans of the coloring pages may not know: it wasn’t just a popular cartoon, it was the first one built specifically for a primetime, adult-adjacent audience, opening a door that every animated primetime show since, from The Simpsons onward, has walked through.
Fine motor development gets a theme-specific workout here, too. The American Academy of Pediatrics has pointed to structured coloring as a genuine contributor to fine motor development in children roughly between the ages of two and seven. The show’s signature joke, ordinary modern conveniences rebuilt from stone, wood, and cooperative animals, gives coloring pages an unusually detailed category of small objects to render carefully: a bird perched as a record needle, a small dinosaur standing in for a household appliance, and similar sight gags reward close attention in a way a plain modern living room wouldn’t.
There’s a specific value in how many small, ordinary moods this particular set covers. Art Therapy Practitioners have noted that coloring a wide range of everyday emotional moments, dizzy, sleepy, playful, surprised, rather than one dramatic pose repeated, can help a child practice recognizing and naming different everyday feelings through a character they already find familiar and comforting.
Real vocabulary comes with the territory, too. A child who can explain that Fred and Wilma are a married couple, Barney and Betty are their neighbors, Pebbles is Fred and Wilma’s daughter, Bamm-Bamm is the Rubbles’ son, and Dino is the family pet has picked up the actual relationships the show is built around, not just a list of names.
How to Color Flintstones Coloring Pages
Let stone and earth tones run through the household objects. The show’s core joke is modern suburban life rebuilt from prehistoric materials, so keeping furniture and gadgets in warm browns, grays, and stone textures keeps that joke visible on the page.
Match color energy to Fred’s specific mood. A sleeping or dizzy pose suits calmer, muted colors. A dancing or jumping pose suits something brighter. Treating every Fred portrait identically flattens out the variety that makes this group interesting.
Give each figure in a group scene a distinct look. Different expressions and postures, rather than nearly identical figures, are what make a family or duo page read as a real moment between specific people.
Let the Great Gazoo stand apart from the family’s usual palette. As the most visually different character in the set, he’s the one page where breaking from the family’s earthy color scheme actually makes the most sense.
5 Creative Craft Ideas with Flintstones Coloring Pages
Fred’s Day Mood Board
Color four or five of Fred’s small solo portraits, dizzy, painting, dancing, and sleeping, and arrange them in a row like a loose comic strip of one ordinary day. About twenty minutes for a genuinely personal little story.
Family Portrait Gallery
Color the full Flintstone family and Rubble family group portraits together and display them side by side as a small neighborhood gallery. Twenty minutes for a display that captures the whole cast in two images.
Stone Age Household Study
Pick one domestic scene and spend real time on the household details, specifically, the stone and wood furniture, any animal-powered gadget in view, before moving on to the characters themselves. Fifteen minutes focused on the show’s signature joke.
Who’s Who Character Card
Color three or four character portraits and write each person’s real relationship to Fred underneath: wife, neighbor, daughter, pet. Fifteen minutes for a simple, accurate little reference card.
Valentine’s Day Card
Color the Valentine’s Day-themed page and fold it into an actual card for a family member or friend. Ten minutes, kept purely festive.
FAQ About Flintstones Coloring Pages
Are these Flintstones 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 open it in the online coloring tool to color on screen.
What age group are these Flintstones coloring pages best suited for?
The simpler family and Pebbles-focused pages work well from age 3. Fred’s more detailed solo portraits and the duo and group scenes, with more figures or finer detail, suit ages 5 and up.
Was The Flintstones really the first primetime animated show?
Yes. When it premiered in 1960, it was the first animated series produced specifically for American primetime television, well before the format became common decades later.
Is The Flintstones based on a real show?
Not officially, but it was widely noted at the time for its resemblance to “The Honeymooners.” Jackie Gleason, the star of that show, reportedly considered legal action before deciding against it, after being asked if he really wanted to be known as the person who got a show so many kids and families loved pulled off the air.
Who are all the characters shown in this collection?
Fred and Wilma Flintstone are a married couple. Barney and Betty Rubble are their neighbors and closest friends. Pebbles is Fred and Wilma’s daughter. Bamm-Bamm is the Rubbles’ adopted son. Dino is the Flintstones’ pet dinosaur, and the Great Gazoo is a small alien character who joined the show in its later seasons.
When did The Flintstones originally air?
The original series ran from 1960 to 1966, and the characters have appeared in spin-offs, specials, and films in the decades since.
Are these pages official Flintstones products?
No. These are fan-style coloring pages inspired by the characters and are not official merchandise. They are not licensed by or affiliated with Warner Bros., Hanna-Barbera, or any other rights holder connected to The Flintstones.
Can I use these pages for a themed birthday party or classroom activity?
Yes. The family portraits work well as party favors for a Flintstones or retro-cartoon themed birthday, and teachers have used the show’s real television history, including its primetime milestone, as a starting point for a simple lesson on the history of animation.
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 using the share buttons at the top of each design page.
