Four Seasons Girls Coloring Pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com is a collection of 30+ free pages showing girls in seasonal activities and settings across the full calendar year – from spring flower fields and summer beaches to autumn orchards and winter snow scenes. Download any page as a PDF to print, or color online in your browser. The full Seasons collection is at Seasons Coloring Pages.

What Is This Collection?

This collection takes a specific illustration approach to the four seasons: rather than depicting the seasons as abstract landscapes or weather scenes, each page shows a girl actively engaged in a seasonal activity – doing something that only makes sense at that particular time of year. A girl collecting acorns with a squirrel is unmistakably autumn. A girl building a snowman is unmistakably winter. A girl riding a bike through a flower field is in spring. The activity is the season, and the seasonal environment is built around it.

Four group pages open the collection – Beautiful Four Seasons Girls, Four Seasons Girls Taking, Four Girls Representing Seasons, and Four Seasons Girls and Fashion – showing all four seasons’ characters together in a single composition. These are the most explicit expressions of the seasonal contrast theme: the four girls positioned side by side, each dressed and posed for her own season, create an immediate visual comparison between the four palettes and four aesthetic registers.

Spring Pages

The spring pages share a common visual vocabulary of light, growth, and outdoor openness. Girl Blowing Flower Petals shows a girl in a field releasing petals from her hand – the petals floating mid-air carry all the delicacy of early spring. Girl Making Flower Crown shows the seasonal craft most associated with the season – a girl kneeling in a flower field, assembling the crown with a butterfly and bee nearby. Girl Riding Bike in Flower Field captures the freedom of the season in motion. Girl Walking in Tulip Field with Windmill is the most geographically specific page in the collection – the windmill places it firmly in the Dutch tulip-country aesthetic, with the girl carrying a basket through rows of blooms.

Girl Planting Seeds with Birds is the agricultural and ecological spring page – the act of sowing, the birds gathering around freshly turned soil, the promise of growth built into the composition. Girl Dancing with Birds and Girl with Butterflies in Sunny Field are the most purely joyful pages – movement and light and small living things responding to warmth. Girl Taking Photo of Flowers puts the girl in the role of observer rather than participant, documenting the season rather than simply being in it.

Summer Pages

The summer pages move from the active outdoor world of spring into the heat, water, and leisure register of the long-light months. Girl Relaxing on Beach Chair with Popsicle is the quintessential peak-summer image – the beach chair under a palm tree, the popsicle, the flip-flops nearby. Girl with Surfboard at Beach and Girl Scuba Diving with Sea Creatures both approach summer through the ocean: the first from the surface, the second from below, with coral, fish, and sea turtles surrounding the diving figure.

Girl in Kimono at Festival with Lanterns shifts the summer setting to the Japanese summer festival tradition – the yukata/kimono, the paper lanterns, and fireworks above the food stalls. Girl Watching Fireworks approaches the same celebration from the spectator’s side. Girl Tourist with Luggage and Map frames summer as travel time – a beach setting with a cruise ship and airplane visible, the girl with her rolling suitcase looking at a map. Girl Hiking with Map in Nature is the active outdoor counterpart – the trail and the map, and the bird flying overhead, placing the hiker in a woodland summer setting.

Autumn Pages

The autumn pages are the warmest in palette and the most grounded in the domestic and harvest traditions of the season. Girl Collecting Acorns with Squirrel places the girl under an oak tree on a leaf-covered ground with a squirrel companion – the squirrel’s presence reinforces the pre-winter gathering quality of the scene. Girl Holding Apple Basket in Orchard and Girl Reading Under Apple Tree both use the apple tree as their anchor, the first in harvest mode, the second in the quiet enjoyment of the season’s calm.

A girl playing with Autumn Leaves in a park with a bench behind her captures the outdoor leisure of the season. Girl with Jack-o’-Lantern and Pumpkins brings Halloween into the collection – the girl with her carved pumpkin, surrounded by vines and fallen leaves, wearing the striped socks and beret of the season’s folk-art aesthetic. Girl Serving Thanksgiving Turkey places the season at its festive endpoint – the full table, the family gathered, the holiday meal.

Three autumn pages shift to quieter, more intimate activities: Girl Embroidering Leaf Design (indoors by a window with leaves visible outside), Girl Petting Fox in Forest (sitting on a log in a woodland setting with a small fox), and Girl Gardening in Autumn (kneeling in the garden in her winter coat, planting among fallen leaves). Girl Weaving Basket Outdoors is the most craft-focused autumn page – the girl working at her basket-weaving under a simple outdoor shelter with insects flying nearby.

Winter Pages

The winter pages divide between outdoor snow activities and indoor warmth. Girl Building Snowman is the most directly seasonal – the girl in her winter coat kneeling in snow beside a completed snowman with pine trees behind her. Girl Petting Reindeer in Snowy Scene pairs the girl with a harnessed reindeer in a pine-and-snowflake landscape. Cute Girl Ice Skating shows her in motion on ice with a string of festive lights overhead.

The Christmas-specific pages move indoors: Girl Baking Christmas Cookies shows the apron-and-kitchen scene, the rolling pin, cookie cutters, and a tray of tree-shaped cookies ready for the oven. Girl Decorating Christmas Tree shows the star going on top of a fully decorated tree with presents at the base. Girl Decorating Window with Snowflakes shows the paper-craft activity of the season – the girl placing snowflake decorations on a windowpane with a wreath visible on the door beside her.

Coloring Tips

The girl herself is the visual anchor of every page, and the first coloring decision is her skin tone and hair color. These choices will be repeated across every page in the collection if you color it as a set – keeping the character consistent creates a narrative sense that the same girl is moving through the year. The hair color in particular defines whether her skin reads as warm or cool against the seasonal backgrounds: warm auburn or honey-brown hair reads naturally against autumn’s amber palette, while darker or lighter hair reads better against the starker contrasts of winter.

For spring pages, the background palette is the softest of all four seasons – pale yellow-green grass, sky blue skies with white clouds, soft pinks and lavenders for flower petals, and the barely-there green of new leaves. The girl’s clothing in spring should be lighter and brighter than in any other season: pastels and whites and the first warm colors of the year. The Girl Walking in Tulip Field with Windmill benefits from deliberately varied tulip colors – red, yellow, pink, and purple tulips in distinct rows mirror how tulip fields actually look and make the background the most color-complex element of the composition.

For summer pages, the palette shifts to full saturation – the deepest turquoise for ocean water, the strongest yellow for bright sunlight, vivid coral and orange for beach accessories, intense greens for palm trees and tropical foliage. The Girl Scuba Diving with Sea Creatures is the most technically interesting summer page for color: underwater light filters differently than surface light, tinting everything with a blue-green cast that should be applied lightly over all elements, with the sea creatures adding vivid accent colors (orange clownfish, green sea turtle, pink coral) against the blue-green base.

For autumn pages, the palette is warm and muted – amber, burnt orange, terracotta, deep red, golden yellow, and the various browns of bark and fallen leaves. A useful technique for autumn leaf pages is to use three or four distinct leaf colors alternating through the composition – no single leaf color but a mix of yellow, orange, red, and the occasional still-green late-season leaf, just as real autumn trees look. Girl Collecting Acorns with Squirrel benefits from careful attention to the squirrel’s fur: a warm grey-brown with a slightly lighter belly, matching the acorn caps in color value.

For winter pages, the outdoor scenes are split into a cool exterior palette and (where applicable) a warm interior light source. Snow is not white – render it in very light blue-grey in shadow areas and leave the paper white only in the brightest highlight zones. The night sky on the Girl Watching Fireworks page should be a deep navy-to-indigo gradient, with the fireworks bursts in their warmest yellows, oranges, and reds providing the contrast. For the Christmas indoor pages – Girl Baking Christmas Cookies, Girl Decorating Christmas Tree – the warm amber-yellow of kitchen and fireplace light against the cool blue-grey visible through windows creates the specific winter-interior quality that makes these pages feel cozy.

For the group pages – Beautiful Four Seasons Girls, Four Girls Representing Seasons – the coloring challenge is maintaining all four seasonal palettes simultaneously in a single composition. Assign each girl her season’s palette before you begin, and apply each color only to that girl and her season’s background elements. The finished result should read immediately as four distinct seasons, even in a single frame.

5 Activities with Your Four Seasons Girls Pages

Color the same girl across all four seasons as a matched set. From the group pages, identify which girl represents each season. Then print four individual activity pages – one clearly spring (Girl Making Flower Crown), one summer (Girl Relaxing on Beach Chair with Popsicle), one autumn (Girl Collecting Acorns with Squirrel), one winter (Girl Building Snowman). Color all four using the same skin tone and hair color for the girl figure on every page, but use completely season-appropriate palettes for everything else. Display the four pages in order around a table or on a wall. This is the classic “four seasons series” exercise – the sameness of the figure across the four different environments makes the seasonal contrast work.

Seasonal fashion design challenge. Print Four Seasons Girls and Fashion or Beautiful Four Seasons Girls. Before you start coloring, study the clothing each girl is wearing and notice how much the outfit signals the season – the spring girl’s light dress, the summer girl’s beach-ready outfit, the autumn girl’s layered coat and scarf, the winter girl’s bundled warmth. Color the outfits as designed, then take a blank sheet of paper and sketch your own seasonal outfit for each girl – what would you dress the autumn girl in if you were designing her costume? The coloring page is the starting point; the fashion design exercise happens alongside it.

The background-only challenge. Print Girl with Butterflies in Sunny Field (spring), Girl Scuba Diving with Sea Creatures (summer), Girl Playing with Autumn Leaves (fall), and Girl Petting Reindeer in Snowy Scene (winter). Color each page, leaving the girl figure entirely uncolored – work only on the background environment, the animals, the plants, the sky, and every element that is not the human figure. When you finish, look at the four uncolored girl shapes against the four fully rendered seasonal backgrounds. This exercise isolates the background and teaches you how much seasonal character is carried by the environment rather than the figure.

Color the Thanksgiving and Christmas pages as a December pair. Print Girl Serving Thanksgiving Turkey and Girl Decorating Christmas Tree. Color both in their respective holiday palettes – warm amber, burnt orange, and harvest gold for Thanksgiving; red, green, and gold for Christmas. Display them as a pair under the heading “November and December.” The contrast between the two palettes – both warm, but one dominated by orange and brown, the other by red and green – shows how closely adjacent the two major American autumn-winter holidays are, and how different their color languages are despite the proximity.

Build a year-in-scenes book. Print one page from each of the following: Girl Planting Seeds with Birds (spring), Girl Walking in Tulip Field with Windmill (spring), Girl with Surfboard at Beach (summer), Girl in Kimono at Festival with Lanterns (summer), Girl Collecting Acorns with Squirrel (autumn), Girl Reading Under Apple Tree (autumn), Girl Baking Christmas Cookies (winter), Girl Ice Skating (winter). Color all eight pages in order, keeping the character’s skin tone and hair consistent throughout. Arrange them in seasonal order and add a one-sentence caption under each page describing what month the scene takes place in. The eight finished pages are a visual calendar of the girl’s year – eight moments spread across twelve months, connected by the continuity of the same character moving through the seasons.

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Jennifer Thoa – Writer and Content Creator

Hi there! I’m Jennifer Thoa, a writer and content creator at Coloringpagesonly.com. With a love for storytelling and a passion for creativity, I’m here to inspire and share exciting ideas that bring color and joy to your world. Let’s dive into a fun and imaginative adventure together!