Free Harley Quinn Coloring Pages: 40+ pages featuring classic Harley Quinn, DC Comics Harley Quinn, Harley Quinn and Joker, Harley Quinn and Batman, Suicide Squad-inspired Harley Quinn, Daddy’s Lil Monster designs, cute simple Harley pages, Harley Quinn sketch art, LEGO Batman Harley Quinn, red-and-black costumes, pink-and-blue hair, card details, diamond patterns, comic-style poses, and printable Harley Quinn coloring pages for kids, teens, adults, comic fans, party activities, fan art folders, and creative coloring time. All free, printable PDFs, JPGs, PNGs, and online coloring pages are ready for home coloring, superhero art activities, comic fan projects, costume color practice, travel folders, craft time, and screen-free creative breaks.
Harley Quinn is one of the most visually recognizable characters in the DC world because her design is built around contrast. Red and black, pink and blue, playful and dramatic, comic-style and modern fashion all meet in one character. Her expressive face, bold makeup, split-color hair, diamond patterns, card-inspired details, and changing outfits make her a strong coloring theme for fans who enjoy character design, costume coloring, and comic-style art.
This collection is useful because Harley Quinn pages are not all the same. Some pages are simple, cute, and easier for younger colorists. Some focus on classic comic style, sketch art, portraits, or LEGO-style fun. Others include Joker, Batman, DC Universe energy, action poses, or detailed fashion elements for teens, adults, and older comic fans. Because Harley Quinn is often connected with villain stories, action scenes, and more mature comic themes, parents and teachers should review the designs first and choose age-appropriate pages. All free, PDF, JPG, or PNG, print or color online.
What’s Inside
Classic Harley Quinn Coloring Pages
Classic Harley Quinn pages focus on the red-and-black comic identity that made the character easy to recognize. These pages may include jester-inspired costume sections, diamond patterns, gloves, boots, playful expressions, and bold comic poses. This version is especially strong for colorists who like clean contrast and traditional character design.
Classic Harley pages are useful because the design teaches visual balance-red and black need to stay separate. White or pale gray areas should stay clean. Diamond shapes should remain sharp. If the costume colors become muddy, the character loses her strongest identity.
Coloring classic Harley Quinn pages: Start with red and black costume sections before coloring the background. Keep diamond shapes crisp and symmetrical. Use white, pale gray, or light skin tones for the face and highlight areas if the page includes them. Add small shadows around gloves, boots, collars, and folds, but do not cover the clean red-and-black contrast.
DC Comics Harley Quinn Pages
DC Comics Harley Quinn pages often have stronger linework, expressive faces, bold poses, and superhero-universe energy. These designs can feel like comic panels because they rely on dramatic outlines, confident expressions, and graphic contrast.
The strongest value of these pages is expression. Harley Quinn can look amused, mischievous, confident, surprised, dramatic, or playful. The eyes, eyebrows, smile, makeup, and head angle carry much of the mood. A small color decision around the face can change the whole page.
Coloring DC Comics Harley Quinn pages: Color the face and expression before the background. Use red, black, white, pink, blue, and pale skin tones for a recognizable Harley palette. Add controlled shadows around the eyes, lips, hair, and costume edges. Use simple comic-style background colors such as gray, purple, yellow, red, or blue so the face stays clear.
Suicide Squad-Inspired Harley Quinn Coloring Pages
Suicide Squad-inspired Harley Quinn pages usually feel modern, colorful, and fashion-focused. These pages may include pigtails, blue-and-pink hair, bold makeup, jacket shapes, boots, outfit text, shorts, accessories, and confident poses. This version is popular because the colors are bright and easy to recognize.
These pages need planning because there are many details. If every area is bright, the page can become crowded. The best result comes from deciding the main focus first: hair, makeup, jacket, text, or pose.
Coloring Suicide Squad-inspired Harley Quinn pages: Start with the hair and face. Use blonde or white-blonde as a base if needed, then add pink to one side and blue to the other. Use darker pink and blue near the ends and lighter highlights near the top. Keep makeup sharp, then color outfit details after the face and hair are complete.
Harley Quinn and Joker Coloring Pages
Harley Quinn and Joker pages bring character interaction into the collection. These pages may include Joker card details, dramatic poses, playful expressions, or comic-style scenes. They are strong for fans who enjoy storytelling because two characters immediately create tension, humor, or action.
The main challenge is color separation. Harley often uses red, black, white, pink, and blue. Joker often uses green, purple, white, red, and darker tones. If the palettes overlap too much, the characters can blend.
Coloring Harley Quinn and Joker pages: Color Harley first, then Joker, then the background. Use Harley’s red, black, pink, and blue accents clearly. Use purple, green, white, and red carefully for Joker. Keep both faces readable. A simple card-themed, city, or comic-style background works best because the characters already have strong colors.
Harley Quinn and Batman Pages
Harley Quinn and Batman pages create a strong visual contrast. Harley is bright, expressive, playful, and unpredictable. Batman is darker, structured, serious, and shadow-based. This makes their pages useful for learning color balance.
The goal is to keep each character’s identity clear. Harley should not become too dark, and Batman should not become too bright. Their contrast is what makes the page work.
Coloring Harley Quinn and Batman pages: Keep Batman in black, gray, navy, or muted blue, with yellow details only if the page includes an emblem or belt. Keep Harley brighter with red, black, pink, and blue accents. Use a simple background so the contrast between the characters remains the main focus.
Daddy’s Lil Monster Harley Quinn Pages
Daddy’s Lil Monster Harley Quinn pages focus on one of the most recognizable modern Harley looks. These pages may include the phrase, pigtails, makeup, jacket details, shorts, boots, and a confident character attitude. They are popular because text, outfit, and hair details give colorists many small areas to customize.
This type of page is better for older colorists or fans who enjoy detailed character fashion. If parents are choosing pages for younger children, simpler Harley designs may be a better fit.
Coloring Daddy’s Lil Monster pages: Color the text carefully so the letters remain readable. Use pink and blue for pigtails, red and black for costume accents, and pale gray or white for highlights. Finish the face and hair first, then move to the clothing details and background.
Cute Simple Harley Quinn Coloring Pages
Cute, simple Harley Quinn pages soften the character and make the design easier for younger or beginner colorists. These pages may include larger outlines, simpler faces, fewer accessories, and friendlier poses. They work well for quick coloring, party tables, fan folders, and low-stress creative time.
These pages are important because Harley Quinn can be dramatic in many versions. A simple design makes the theme more approachable and shifts the focus to clear hair colors, costume contrast, and friendly expression.
Coloring cute, simple Harley Quinn pages: Use bright but simple colors. Choose red and black for the costume, pink and blue for hair, and one light background color. Avoid heavy shadows. Keep the eyes bright, the face friendly, and the costume sections easy to see.
LEGO Batman Harley Quinn Pages
LEGO Batman Harley Quinn pages bring a blocky, toy-like style into the collection. These designs are different from detailed comic pages because the shapes are simpler, the proportions are playful, and the outlines are easier to color.
LEGO-style pages are useful for younger fans and toy-style coloring. They do not need realistic shading. They work best with bold colors, clean edges, and simple backgrounds.
Coloring LEGO Batman Harley Quinn pages: Use flat, bright colors. Keep the red and black costume areas clean. Add pink and blue hair accents if the design supports that version. Because LEGO-style faces are simple, small details such as eyes, smile, and costume symbols should stay clear. A plain yellow, gray, or comic-style background can make the figure stand out.
Harley Quinn Sketch and Lineart Pages
Sketch and lineart pages are excellent for colorists who enjoy the drawing process. These pages may have clean outlines, expressive faces, rougher sketch energy, or open areas for shading. They are good for teens, older kids, and adults who want to experiment with a custom palette.
Sketch pages do not need to look like finished posters. They can be beautiful with limited colors, soft pencils, or selective highlights. Lineart pages can handle stronger color because the outlines are usually cleaner.
Coloring Harley Quinn sketch and lineart pages: Decide whether you want a soft sketch look or a bold comic look. For sketch pages, use light pencil pressure, soft pink and blue hair tones, and gentle red-and-black shading. For lineart pages, use stronger red, black, blue, pink, and purple. Leave small highlights in the hair and face to keep the drawing lively.
Harley Quinn Portrait Pages
Portrait pages focus on Harley’s face, hair, makeup, eyes, lips, and expression. These pages are strong because Harley Quinn is a character with a very expressive visual identity. A portrait can feel playful, intense, cute, dramatic, stylish, or mischievous depending on the eyes, smile, makeup, and hair colors.
The face should stay readable. Too much background color or heavy shading can hide the expression. Portrait pages work best when the hair, eyes, lips, and makeup are planned before the background.
Coloring Harley Quinn portrait pages: Start with skin tone, eyes, and makeup. Use red, black, pink, or blue around the eyes, depending on the version. For hair, use blonde, white-blonde, pink, blue, or split-color effects. Keep lips bright but controlled. A soft gray, pale pink, light blue, purple, or comic-dot background can support the portrait without covering the face.
Harley Quinn Costume and Fashion Pages
Harley Quinn’s pages are strong for costume coloring because the character has many recognizable looks. Some pages may include jackets, boots, gloves, shorts, collars, belts, diamond patterns, striped elements, or modern fashion details. These sheets are useful for colorists who enjoy outfit design and bold palettes.
The challenge is organizing the outfit. Harley’s design can include many small details, so the best approach is to decide what should stand out first: hair, jacket, boots, text, diamonds, or accessories.
Coloring Harley Quinn costume pages: Choose a main palette first. Classic pages work well with red, black, and white. Modern pages work well with red, blue, pink, black, and metallic gray. Keep boots and belts slightly darker so they anchor the outfit. Use highlights on jacket edges, gloves, and accessories to keep the design sharp.
Harley Quinn Card and Comic Detail Pages
Some Harley Quinn pages include playing cards, Joker card symbols, diamonds, comic-style shapes, speech bubble energy, or decorative background details. These small elements help the page feel connected to Harley’s playful, unpredictable personality.
These details should support the character, not compete with her. If every card, diamond, and background shape is too bright, the main figure may lose focus. A good page uses detail as rhythm around the character.
Coloring card and comic detail pages: Use red, black, white, and gray for card details. Add yellow, purple, or blue only as small accents. Keep diamonds clean and symmetrical. If the background has many shapes, color Harley first, then decide which details need strong color and which should stay light.
Action-Style Harley Quinn Pages
Action-style Harley Quinn pages may include strong poses, dramatic movement, comic angles, city energy, or villain-style attitude. These pages are better for teens, adults, and older comic fans because they usually have more detail and stronger visual intensity.
The key is to keep the pose readable. Action pages often have hair movement, clothing details, arms, legs, accessories, and backgrounds all competing for attention. Good coloring separates the character from the scene.
Coloring action-style Harley Quinn pages: Color the face and hair first, then the outfit, then the background details. Use strong contrast around the character outline. Keep background colors slightly muted if the pose is detailed. Use red, black, blue, pink, purple, or gray to create a comic-book action mood.
Detailed Harley Quinn Pages for Older Fans
Detailed Harley Quinn pages may include complex hair, makeup, outfit sections, small accessories, background shapes, character pairs, or comic-style scenes. These pages are ideal for teens, adults, and fans who enjoy more careful coloring.
Detailed pages for reward planning. If you start randomly, the page may become crowded. A clear color order helps: face, hair, costume, accessories, background, final highlights.
Coloring detailed Harley Quinn pages: Use colored pencils for hair gradients, makeup, shadows, costume folds, and small accessories. Use markers only on larger areas if you want a bold contrast. Save final details such as hair shine, eye highlights, lip color, card symbols, diamonds, and background accents for the end.
What These Pages Do
Harley Quinn coloring pages give fans a focused way to explore character design through contrast, expression, costume, and color. Unlike many superhero pages that rely mostly on one suit color, Harley Quinn works through visual tension: red against black, pink against blue, playful against dramatic, and comic style against modern fashion.
The first major value of this collection is color identity. Harley Quinn is easy to recognize when her strongest visual signals are clear: red and black costume areas, blue and pink hair accents, bold makeup, playful expression, diamond shapes, and card-inspired details. Coloring these elements helps fans understand how a character can be built from repeated colors and symbols.
The second value is expression. Harley Quinn pages are not only about clothing. Her eyes, smile, eyebrows, head angle, and pose can change the mood of the page. A soft smile can feel cute. A sharp grin can feel mischievous. A dramatic pose can feel intense. This makes the collection useful for learning how small facial and body details shape a character’s personality.
The third value is version-based coloring. Harley Quinn is not limited to one look. Classic comic Harley needs a strong red-and-black structure. Modern Harley often uses pink-and-blue hair, fashion details, and bold makeup. LEGO-style Harley works best with flat, bright colors. Portrait pages need face and hair control. Action pages need contrast and background restraint. Choosing colors by version makes the finished page cleaner and more intentional.
The fourth value is storytelling. A Harley Quinn and Joker page tells a different story from a Harley and Batman page. A cute, simple Harley page feels different from a detailed action page. A card-themed page can feel playful, while a darker DC Universe page can feel more dramatic. Each finished page can become a short fan story, a character card, or a comic-style display.
For parents and teachers, selected Harley Quinn pages can support art conversations about contrast, pattern, mood, and character design. Adults can ask: What colors make this character recognizable? Which details show personality? Is the page playful, dramatic, funny, or action-focused? The American Academy of Pediatrics often emphasizes play as a way children build communication, emotional understanding, problem-solving, and social connection. With character coloring pages, that idea fits naturally through describing, choosing, comparing, and storytelling.
Coloring can also provide a structured, quiet break. A 2005 study in the Art Therapy Journal reported that coloring organized designs was associated with anxiety reduction compared with a less structured art task. Harley Quinn coloring pages are not therapy and should not be described as medical treatment, but their clear outlines, repeated costume patterns, hair sections, facial details, and comic-style shapes can make them useful for calm art time, fan activities, party tables, and screen-free creative breaks.
Because Harley Quinn is often connected with villain stories, action scenes, and more mature comic themes, parents and teachers should choose pages carefully. Cute, simple, LEGO-style, clean portrait, and basic costume pages may fit younger fans better, while detailed action, Joker-pair, and darker DC Universe pages may be better for teens, adults, or older comic fans.
How to Color Harley Quinn Pages Well
Start with the Harley version on the page. Classic comic Harley, modern Harley, cute Harley, LEGO Harley, portrait Harley, and action-style Harley should not all use the same coloring plan. Identify the version first, then choose the palette.
Use classic colors for classic Harley. Classic Harley Quinn pages work best with clean red, black, white, and pale skin tones. Keep costume panels sharp. If the page has diamonds, collars, gloves, or boots, color those areas carefully so the traditional comic identity stays clear.
Use pink and blue carefully for a modern Harley. Modern Harley pages often use blonde or white-blonde hair with pink and blue accents. Add pink on one side and blue on the other, then deepen the color near the ends. Keep hair highlights visible so the pigtails do not look flat.
Use flat bold colors for LEGO Harley. LEGO-style pages look best with simple color blocks. Avoid heavy shadows. Keep the face, smile, costume, and hair accents clean because toy-style designs depend on clear shapes.
Use face-first coloring for portraits. Portrait Harley pages depend on the eyes, makeup, lips, and hairline. Finish the face before adding a strong background. If the expression is clear, the whole page feels stronger.
Use contrast control for action pages. Action-style Harley pages can become crowded because they may include movement, outfit details, and background shapes. Keep the character brighter or sharper than the background. Muted gray, purple, or blue backgrounds can help Harley stand out.
Keep the red-and-black identity clear. Red and black are Harley’s strongest classic colors. Use them with clean separation. If the costume has panels, diamonds, or split sections, avoid muddy colors between them.
Make makeup sharp but not messy. Use red, black, pink, blue, or purple around the eyes, depending on the design. Keep edges controlled. A little smudged effect can work for dramatic pages, but too much dark color can cover the expression.
Plan costume details before filling them. Jackets, boots, gloves, belts, collars, text, diamonds, and accessories can make the page busy. Decide what should stand out first. Usually, the face and hair should be strongest, then the costume, then the background.
Use contrast for Batman and Joker scenes. If Batman appears, keep him darker and more structured. If Joker appears, use green, purple, white, and red carefully. Harley should keep her own palette so the characters do not blend.
Keep card and diamond details clean. Playing cards, diamonds, and comic symbols look best when their edges stay sharp. Use red, black, white, and gray first, then add small accent colors only if needed.
Use softer colors for cute pages. Cute Harley Quinn pages do not need heavy shadows. Use light pink, sky blue, soft red, purple, pale yellow, and clean black outlines. Keep the face friendly and the background simple.
Use colored pencils for hair and makeup. Colored pencils give better control for pigtails, split-color hair, blush, eye makeup, and small costume details. Markers work well for larger costume panels and clean comic-style color blocks.
Build the background after the character. Harley Quinn is visually busy, so the background should support her rather than compete. Try gray, purple, pale blue, comic dots, card shapes, city tones, or simple color blocks.
The common mistake is using too many bright colors everywhere. Harley Quinn already has a strong palette. If the hair, outfit, makeup, cards, and background are all equally bright, the page becomes crowded. Choose one main focus and let the other areas support it.
5 Creative Craft Ideas
Harley Quinn Mood Cards
Turn finished Harley Quinn coloring pages into collectible mood cards. Color the character, cut the artwork into a card shape, and glue it onto cardstock.
Add a mood label such as “Playful,” “Comic,” “Bold,” “Cute,” or “Dramatic.” Then write the palette used: red and black, pink and blue, purple and black, or pastel Harley. This craft works well for fan folders, party tables, and character design activities.
Split-Color Hair Practice Sheet
Use a Harley Quinn portrait or sketch page to practice split-color hair. Print the same page twice and color one version with pink and blue hair, then another with a custom palette such as purple and teal, red and gold, or pastel pink and lavender.
Add short notes about which version looks classic, modern, cute, or dramatic. This craft helps colorists understand how hair color changes character mood.
Harley Quinn Comic Panel Poster
Choose an action-style or portrait Harley Quinn page and turn it into a comic poster. Color the character first, then add a bold background with dots, stars, cards, diamonds, or speech bubble shapes.
Add a title such as “Harley Quinn,” “Comic Style,” or “Color Chaos.” Glue the finished page onto red, black, pink, blue, or purple cardstock for a display-ready fan art piece.
Red-and-Black vs. Pink-and-Blue Palette Challenge
Print two Harley Quinn pages or use two copies of the same page. Color one with a classic red-and-black palette and the other with a modern pink-and-blue palette.
Compare the results. Which one feels more comic? Which one feels more modern? Which one feels cute or dramatic? This craft turns coloring into a simple character design lesson.
Harley Quinn Diamond Garland
Color several Harley Quinn pages or small character sections, then cut them into diamonds, circles, stars, or card shapes. Attach them to a string or ribbon.
Arrange the pieces by color: red, black, pink, blue, white, and purple. Hang the garland for a superhero party, comic-themed room, fan art wall, or creative display corner.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Harley Quinn Coloring Pages free?
Yes. These Harley Quinn coloring pages are free for personal, fan art, party, selected classroom, and creative use. Kids, teens, adults, parents, teachers, and DC fans can print selected pages for coloring time, superhero activities, comic fan folders, craft projects, party tables, or screen-free creative breaks.
Users can also use available online coloring options when they want to color directly on a device without printing first.
Can I print Harley Quinn coloring pages as PDF files?
Yes. The printable PDF option is useful when you want clean outlines and easy home printing. PDF pages work well for fan folders, party activities, art stations, craft projects, and personal collections.
Some pages may also be available as JPG or PNG files, which are helpful for saving, sharing, or using with digital coloring tools.
Can I color Harley Quinn pages online?
Yes. When online coloring is available, users can color Harley Quinn pages directly on a computer, tablet, or mobile device without printing first. This is useful for quick creative time, digital color testing, travel, or paper-free coloring.
Online coloring also lets users test red-and-black outfits, pink-and-blue hair, makeup, card details, and background colors before saving or printing.
What are Harley Quinn Coloring Pages?
Harley Quinn Coloring Pages are printable and online coloring sheets featuring Harley Quinn in different DC-inspired styles. They may include classic comic Harley, modern Harley Quinn, Harley and Joker pages, Harley and Batman pages, cute simple designs, LEGO Batman Harley Quinn, sketch pages, portraits, card details, and action-style scenes.
They are useful for fans who enjoy bold character coloring, comic-style art, costume design, expressive faces, and superhero universe themes.
How many Harley Quinn Coloring Pages are in this collection?
This collection includes 40+ free Harley Quinn coloring pages. The pages range from simple, cute designs and LEGO-style pages to more detailed portraits, comic-style poses, Joker scenes, Batman scenes, DC Universe pages, sketch art, and costume-focused pages.
Because the collection includes different detail levels, younger colorists can choose simpler pages, while teens, adults, and comic fans can enjoy more detailed designs.
Are Harley Quinn coloring pages good for kids?
Some Harley Quinn pages can be good for kids, especially cute, simple pages, LEGO-style designs, clean portraits, and pages with larger outlines. These are easier for younger colorists and better for simple creative time.
Because Harley Quinn is often connected with villain stories, action scenes, and more mature comic themes, parents and teachers should review the designs first and choose age-appropriate pages.
What colors should I use for Harley Quinn?
Classic Harley Quinn pages usually work well with red, black, white, and pale skin tones. Modern Harley Quinn pages often use blonde or white-blonde hair with pink and blue accents, plus red, black, blue, and metallic details.
You can also create your own version with purple, gold, teal, silver, or pastel colors. The most important thing is keeping the character’s main features clear: bold hair, expressive makeup, strong costume contrast, and playful details.
How can I make Harley Quinn coloring pages look more comic-style?
Use strong contrast, clean red-and-black sections, sharp makeup, bold hair colors, and simple background shapes. Comic dots, playing cards, diamonds, stars, speech bubble shapes, and city tones help the page feel more like a comic panel.
Keep the face and hair readable, then add background details last. A good comic-style Harley Quinn page should feel energetic without becoming too crowded.
Harley Quinn coloring pages give colorists a bold way to explore character design, costume contrast, expressive faces, split-color hair, comic details, and fan art storytelling. From cute, simple pages to detailed action scenes, each design can become playful, dramatic, stylish, or comic-inspired depending on the colors you choose.
Browse the full collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com. All 40+ pages are free, available as PDF, JPG, or PNG, ready to print at home or color online.
These Harley Quinn pages are created for personal, fan art, party, selected classroom, and creative coloring use. For younger children, parents and teachers should choose simpler, age-appropriate designs such as cute pages, LEGO-style pages, and clean portraits. Teens, adults, and comic fans may enjoy more detailed action, Joker, Batman, costume, and sketch pages.
For the final pass, keep the costume contrast clean, make the split-color hair readable, sharpen the eyes, makeup, cards, diamonds, and outfit details, and keep the background supportive instead of too crowded. A clear color plan can make the whole Harley Quinn page feel bold, playful, and complete.
Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #Coloringpagesonly. We especially want to see your Harley Quinn Mood Cards, Split-Color Hair Practice Sheet, and Harley Quinn Comic Panel Poster.
