Free JoJo Siwa coloring pages – 90+ pages featuring JoJo in performance and portrait poses, chibi style, with her dog Bow Bow, alongside unicorns, rainbows, holiday scenes, inspirational messages, and the signature hair bow that started a trend – free printable PDF and online coloring for young fans.
JoJo Siwa – full name Joelle Joni Siwa, born May 19, 2003, in Omaha, Nebraska – first appeared on national television on Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition in 2013, when she was ten years old. By the time she joined Dance Moms in 2015, she had a recognizable look: high ponytail, enormous hair bow, bright colors, and an energy level that read as genuinely limitless rather than performed. She signed with Nickelodeon in 2017. Her music video for “Boomerang” – a song about rising above cyberbullying, released in 2016 – accumulated over 800 million views on YouTube.
What JoJo Siwa built on top of her entertainment career is a brand built around a specific message: be yourself, love who you are, don’t let anyone make you small. That message, delivered consistently and loudly to an audience of children aged 4–12, is the reason the collection in these pages includes pages titled Love Who You Are and Love Yourself alongside unicorns and her dog. These coloring pages are designed for children who know what that message means to them.
These 90+ free pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com cover the full JoJo world. All free, PDF or PNG, print or color online.
What’s Inside
JoJo Portrait Pages – The Full Emotional Range
The largest section of the collection gives JoJo in her most characteristic poses and expressions across a wide range of titles: Smiling Jojo Siwa, Happy Jojo Siwa, Cute Jojo Siwa, Beautiful Jojo Siwa, Lovely Jojo Siwa, Pretty Jojo Siwa, Adorable Jojo Siwa, Cool Jojo Siwa, Strong Jojo Siwa, Confident Jojo Siwa, Sweet Jojo Siwa, and Funny Jojo Siwa.
The range of these titles is not accidental – they reflect the central message of JoJo Siwa’s brand, which is that a girl can be all of these things simultaneously: cute and strong, lovely and confident, adorable and funny. The message is communicated through the accumulation of these titles as much as through any individual page. A child who colors all of them – pretty on Monday, strong on Tuesday, funny on Wednesday – is spending creative time with the idea that these qualities are not in tension with each other.
JoJo’s signature visual elements appear across all portrait pages: the large hair bow at the top of the ponytail, the colorful outfit, and the specific quality of her smile, which is full and unselfconscious. The bow – which she has described as representing staying true to yourself – is the most important detail to get right.
Coloring JoJo’s signature look: The hair bow is the anchor. It can be any color but should be vivid and saturated – never pale or muted. JoJo’s bow collection reportedly exceeds 10,000 individual bows in every color combination imaginable, so there is no wrong color choice for the bow; there is only too little commitment to the color chosen. Her high ponytail is a light golden-brown blonde. Her outfits vary across pages but consistently incorporate bright colors, sparkle, and the cheerful maximalism that defines her visual brand.
Chibi JoJo – The Kawaii Versions
Chibi Jojo Siwa, Chibi Jojo Siwa Coloring Page Free, Jojo Siwa Chibi Coloring Page Free, and several additional chibi-style pages translate JoJo’s look into the large-head, small-body proportions of the chibi aesthetic – which, combined with her already distinctive visual identity (the oversized bow, the colorful outfit), creates an unusually charming result.
The chibi pages are consistently among the most popular in the collection with the youngest fans – children ages 3–6 who respond immediately to the round, expressive chibi face and the recognizable bow, even at a simplified scale. These pages work best with bold, confident flat color application: bright colors, no shading, full commitment to the most vivid version of every choice.
Bow Bow – The Dog Who Became a Star
JoJo’s teacup Yorkshire Terrier – named Bow Bow, which is either a reference to JoJo’s signature accessory or simply what a small dog says, and possibly both simultaneously – has her own section in this collection.
Sweet Bow Bow, Pretty Bow Bow, Cute Bow Bow, Adorable Bow Bow, Sleeping Bow Bow, Bow Bow Dreams, The dog Bow Bow of Jojo Siwa with hearts, The dog Bow Bow dances with Jojo Siwa, Cutie teacup Yorkie Bow Bow, Jojo Siwa with Bow Bow, and Shopping with Jojo Siwa and her dog Bow Bow for Christmas give the dog more page coverage than most human celebrities’ pets manage.
Yorkshire Terriers are a small but tenacious breed – historically working dogs who caught rats in Yorkshire textile mills, now primarily companion dogs. Teacup Yorkies are a smaller variant of the breed, typically weighing under 4 pounds as adults. Bow Bow is depicted in the collection in her characteristic small, fluffy form, often wearing tiny accessories that reference JoJo’s own aesthetic.
Coloring Bow Bow: Yorkshire Terriers have a distinctive tan-and-blue/grey coat – tan on the face, chest, and legs, with a blue-grey saddle on the back and top of the head. In the illustrated coloring pages, Bow Bow’s palette simplifies to a warm golden-tan with brown accents. Her tiny accessories – bows, hearts – should match whatever color JoJo is wearing on the same page for visual consistency.
Unicorn Pages – Where Fantasy Meets the JoJo Brand
Unicorns are the fantasy creature that aligns most naturally with JoJo Siwa’s aesthetic, which is built on rainbow palettes, sparkle, and the principle that more is more. The collection reflects this with a substantial dedicated section.
Unicorn Jojo Siwa, Unicorns Jojo Siwa, Unicorn Jojo Siwa Coloring Page, Pretty Unicorn Jojo Siwa, Lovely Unicorn Jojo Siwa, Cute Unicorn Jojo Siwa, Unicorn with Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa, and Unicorn and Bow Bow place JoJo alongside unicorns, JoJo as a unicorn figure, and Bow Bow in unicorn contexts.
The unicorn pages are the collection’s most visually open – they reward the boldest, most saturated, most maximally colorful approach available. A unicorn page colored in pastels is doing the concept a disservice. JoJo’s unicorn pages want full rainbow treatment: vivid violet, bright pink, electric teal, hot yellow, strong orange. All of them. On the same page.
The Hair Bow Pages – The Accessory as Icon
Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa with Rainbow, Rainbow and Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa, and Unicorn with Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa isolate the hair bow as the page’s central subject – treating JoJo’s signature accessory as an icon in its own right rather than a detail within a larger portrait.
The JoJo bow became a genuine cultural phenomenon when JoJo partnered with accessory brand Claire’s to produce a line of hair bows, which sold millions of units and were adopted by a generation of young girls as a statement of JoJo fandom and personal style. The bow is simultaneously a fashion accessory, a brand symbol, and a statement about not toning yourself down to make other people comfortable, which is one of the more unusual things for a hair accessory to carry, and one of the reasons it resonated so strongly with its target audience.
The rainbow pages in this section reward the most vivid red-orange-yellow-green-blue-violet spectrum available. True rainbow coloring – each band a fully saturated, distinct color, with no muddy transitions – is a specific technical challenge at any scale. Apply each color from the outermost band inward, with confident single-stroke coverage for each band.
Performance and Dance Pages
Jojo Siwa Performing, Jojo Siwa Live Love Dance, and Jojo Siwa dances with her friends capture JoJo in the context most central to her career: performance.
JoJo Siwa began competitive dancing at age five. By the time she appeared on television, her dance training was already extensive – the physical confidence and stage presence visible in photographs and videos reflect years of technical work. The Jojo Siwa Performing page captures the stage persona: high energy, full commitment, the physical expressiveness of someone who has trained to communicate emotion through movement.
Jojo Siwa dances with her friends, capturing a different register – collaborative, social, the joy of group movement rather than solo performance. It is one of the collection’s most group-oriented pages and rewards the challenge of keeping multiple figures visually distinct while maintaining a unified palette across the group.
Inspirational Message Pages
Love Who You Are, Love Yourself, Jojo Siwa Live Love Dance, and I Love You Bow Much are the pages in the collection most directly connected to JoJo Siwa’s message platform.
The phrase “Love Who You Are” is the most succinct statement of what JoJo Siwa’s brand communicates to its young audience. The phrase “Love Yourself” is its complement. These pages combine the inspirational text with JoJo’s illustration in a format that functions as both a coloring activity and a poster that can be displayed after completion – a child-made wall reminder of a message their favorite performer has delivered consistently throughout her public career.
Coloring the text pages: The lettering on these pages should be colored in the most vivid, celebratory tones available – not a neutral or understated treatment. The messages are emphatic and should be colored emphatically. Bright pink for “Love,” bold yellow for “Who,” vivid teal for “You Are” is one approach. Full rainbow treatment across all letters is another. These pages are the least appropriate in the collection for restraint.
Holiday and Christmas Pages
Santa from Jojo Siwa, Holly Jolly Jojo, Holiday Card with Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa, Christmas Tree with Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa, Christmas Socks with Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa, Shopping with Jojo Siwa and her dog Bow Bow for Christmas, and Snowman with Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa bring JoJo’s visual world into the Christmas holiday context – which is a natural fit, since JoJo’s aesthetic (bright colors, maximum visual enthusiasm, cheerfulness as a consistent mode) translates directly into the festive season.
The Snowman with Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa page is particularly charming: a snowman wearing one of JoJo’s signature bows is the kind of image that is funnier and more satisfying than it has any reason to be.
Special Pages
Jojo Siwa Diamond features JoJo in a diamond-themed composition – reflecting the sparkle and glitter aesthetic that runs through all of her merchandise and visual identity. LOL Surprise Doll Jojo Siwa depicts JoJo in the exaggerated proportions and aesthetic of the LOL Surprise doll brand, with which she had a notable collaboration. Cake at the party of Jojo Siwa captures the celebration aesthetic of a JoJo Siwa-themed birthday party context.
What These Pages Do
The inspirational message pages carry real weight. JoJo Siwa has built her brand around a consistent message of self-acceptance directed at young children who are at an age when peer pressure, social comparison, and the beginning of self-consciousness can make that message genuinely useful rather than simply decorative. A child who spends twenty minutes carefully coloring the Love Who You Are page and hangs it on their bedroom wall has created a personal object that delivers a specific message every time they see it. Research in child psychology consistently shows that visual environmental cues – including words and images – contribute meaningfully to the self-concept that children are actively constructing during their elementary school years.
The variety of positive adjectives across the portrait pages builds self-description vocabulary. Cute, beautiful, lovely, pretty, adorable, sweet, funny, cool, strong, confident, happy, smiling – the collection presents these as a list rather than as competing alternatives. A child who colors all of these pages is practicing the idea that a person can be all of these things, that these words do not compete, and that self-description can be generous rather than selective. Research in self-concept development identifies the vocabulary children use to describe themselves as a significant factor in their emerging self-image.
The pet pages build empathy and care vocabulary. The Bow Bow pages – sleeping Bow Bow, dreaming Bow Bow, Bow Bow dancing, Bow Bow with hearts – present a relationship between a person and their pet with genuine tenderness. The varied emotional states of Bow Bow across the pages (sleeping contentedly, dancing enthusiastically, receiving hearts) give children a template for thinking about pet wellbeing as distinct from and worthy of attention.
Fine motor development. The American Academy of Pediatrics identifies fine motor skill development as a key milestone throughout early childhood. JoJo’s signature bow – large, with detailed ribbon folds and often sparkling detail – and her performance costumes with their embellishment and shine elements provide exactly the kind of motivated, detailed fine motor practice that is most developmentally effective. The 2005 Art Therapy Journal study on structured coloring and anxiety reduction applies throughout.
How to Color These Pages Well
The bow is the most important element on any JoJo page. Before choosing any other color, decide what color the bow will be. The bow should be the page’s most vivid, most saturated, most committed color choice – because the bow is the brand’s central visual identifier and because JoJo’s entire visual philosophy is built on the idea that you should not make yourself smaller or quieter to please someone else. Apply the bow color with full pressure, no hedging. It can be any color – rainbow, hot pink, electric blue, vivid red, deep purple – but it should be the most decisive color on the page.
JoJo’s hair is warm blonde. A warm, medium-to-light golden blonde – not platinum, not dirty blonde, but the warm honey-gold tone associated with her actual hair color. Test on scrap paper: it should read as genuinely golden, warm rather than cool.
Her outfits are high-saturation and often multi-colored. Unlike athlete or character coloring pages that require accurate team colors or canonical character palettes, JoJo’s performance outfits are intentionally varied – she wears many different outfits with no single canonical look beyond the bow and ponytail. This means her clothing pages offer genuine creative freedom: any vivid color combination is appropriate, as long as it is vivid. Muted, pastel, or monochromatic approaches conflict with the visual philosophy the brand embodies.
Sparkle and shine need light sources. Many JoJo pages include glitter, stars, diamonds, and sparkle details in the costume or background. To make sparkle read convincingly, place a tiny dot or small cross of white or very pale yellow at the center of each sparkle, then color outward from that center in the surrounding color (if the sparkle is on a pink background, use a slightly darker pink immediately around the white center). The contrast between the white center and the surrounding color creates the impression of light hitting a reflective surface.
For chibi pages, bold and flat is correct. The chibi aesthetic works specifically when color application is decisive and flat – no shading, no gradients, just bold, committed color fills separated by clear outlines. A lightly applied or carefully shaded chibi page reads as unfinished rather than refined.
The unicorn pages want rainbow order. When coloring a unicorn’s mane or a rainbow background, apply colors in the spectral sequence – red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet – with each band a fully saturated, distinct color. The transition points where bands meet should be minimal: a small amount of gentle blending is fine, but the goal is distinct bands of vivid color, not a muddy rainbow where all colors blend into each other.
5 Creative Craft Ideas
JoJo Inspiration Wall
Print the Love Who You Are, Love Yourself, and Strong Jojo Siwa pages. Color all three with maximum commitment – the message pages in full rainbow or vivid single-color treatments, the portrait in JoJo’s canonical look with a vivid bow.
Frame all three in matching simple frames – hot pink, bright yellow, or electric blue frames that match the collection’s aesthetic. Arrange on a bedroom wall as a triptych: the two message pages flanking the portrait in the center, or arranged in whatever order feels most personally meaningful.
The finished display is a child-made piece of wall art that is also a daily affirmation. The physical act of coloring these specific words carefully – spending twenty minutes with “Love Who You Are” – is itself a form of deliberate attention to the message.
Custom JoJo Hair Bow Design
This craft extends the collection’s central symbol into a wearable accessory. Print the Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa with Rainbow and Hair Bow of Jojo Siwa pages. Color both in your chosen palette – this is your personal bow design, not a reproduction of any existing JoJo bow.
Using the colored pages as a reference, cut bow shapes from felt or stiff fabric in your chosen colors. Layer and stitch or glue the layers together in the bow construction: two loops and a center knot. Attach a hair clip or elastic to the back.
The finished bow is wearable, handmade, and specifically designed by you, which is a more direct expression of JoJo’s message about expressing yourself than simply purchasing an existing product.
JoJo Birthday Party Pack
Print five to eight pages from the collection at three scales: full size for wall decoration, half size for place cards and small display items, quarter size for cupcake toppers. Color all of them in a consistent palette: choose a primary color for JoJo’s bow across all pages so the display reads as coordinated.
Full-size pages become instant wall decorations. Half-size pages, folded in half on cardstock, become place cards with each guest’s name written inside. Quarter-size pages, cut out and attached to toothpicks with hot glue, become cupcake toppers.
The three-scale approach creates a visually coherent party environment from a single source – every element in the same color palette, all featuring the same character, all clearly connected. The result looks deliberately designed rather than assembled from different sources.
Bow Bow Emotion Book
The collection’s Bow Bow pages span several emotional states: sleeping, dreaming, dancing, sitting with hearts, and shopping at Christmas. Print all available Bow Bow pages and color each one.
Create a small booklet by folding several sheets of A4 paper in half and stapling along the fold. Glue one Bow Bow image on each spread – the sleeping Bow Bow, the dreaming Bow Bow, the dancing Bow Bow, the Bow Bow with hearts. Below each image, write a sentence: “Bow Bow is sleeping because she had a big day.” “Bow Bow is dancing because her favorite song is on.” “Bow Bow is dreaming about…”
The child fills in the final words. The finished book is a creative writing exercise organized around pet emotional states, which teaches both vocabulary and empathy in a format that feels like storytelling rather than instruction.
JoJo Greeting Card
Print the Happy Jojo Siwa or Smiling Jojo Siwa page and one of the message pages – Love Who You Are, or I Love You Bow Much. Color both carefully. Fold A5 cardstock for the card base.
Cut out the JoJo figure and mount it on the card front. Cut out the message text and mount it below the figure, or add the message in hand-lettering. Inside, write a personal message in the spirit of JoJo’s brand: something genuinely encouraging, something that tells the recipient something specific and true about why they are wonderful.
The finished card takes about thirty minutes and carries more personal weight than any purchased card – because the sender chose to spend that time making it, and because the message inside is theirs rather than a preprinted sentiment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is JoJo Siwa, and how did she become famous? JoJo Siwa (Joelle Joni Siwa, born May 19, 2003, in Omaha, Nebraska) is an American singer, dancer, actress, and television personality. She first appeared on national television on Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition in 2013 and joined the cast of Dance Moms in 2015. She signed with Nickelodeon in 2017 and released several successful songs, including “Boomerang” (2016), which addressed cyberbullying and accumulated over 800 million YouTube views, and “Kid in a Candy Store.” She became equally known for her distinctive visual brand – large hair bows, high ponytail, colorful outfits, and a consistent message of self-acceptance and positivity directed at children.
What is the significance of JoJo Siwa’s hair bow? JoJo’s large hair bow became one of the most recognized accessories in children’s entertainment during the late 2010s. She began wearing oversized bows as a child dancer and continued the practice throughout her career, eventually partnering with Claire’s to produce a signature bow line that sold millions of units globally. The bow has been described by JoJo herself as representing expressing yourself without apology – staying true to who you are rather than minimizing yourself to fit in. For the millions of young girls who adopted the bow as a style choice, it carried this association explicitly.
Who is Bow Bow? Bow Bow is JoJo Siwa’s teacup Yorkshire Terrier, who has appeared prominently in JoJo’s social media content and merchandise from the early days of her career. Yorkshire Terriers are a small, spirited breed originally developed in Yorkshire, England, as working dogs for catching rats in textile mills, and are now one of the most popular companion dog breeds in the United States. Teacup Yorkies are a smaller variant of the breed, typically weighing under 4 pounds. Bow Bow became an unofficial mascot of JoJo’s brand and has her own significant section of this coloring collection.
What are the messages “Love Who You Are” and “Love Yourself” about? These phrases reflect the core of JoJo Siwa’s brand message: self-acceptance and self-confidence, delivered to a young audience at an age when peer pressure and social comparison are becoming significant. JoJo has spoken publicly and repeatedly about the importance of being yourself, not toning down your personality to please others, and not allowing cyberbullying or social pressure to make you hide who you are. “Boomerang,” her most-viewed song, is directly about these themes. The coloring pages featuring these phrases connect the creative activity of coloring to the affirmational message of the brand.
What age group are these pages best suited for? The primary audience for JoJo Siwa is children ages 4–12, the range that grew up with her Nickelodeon content. The simplest pages (large portrait images with minimal background detail, the Bow Bow solo pages) work well from ages 3–4 for children who respond to the character recognition even without detailed knowledge of the brand. The chibi pages are particularly popular with ages 4–7. The portrait pages with performance detail and the holiday scenes suit ages 5–9. The message pages – Love Who You Are, Love Yourself – carry the most meaning for children old enough to understand and apply the message, roughly ages 6 and up.
Can these pages be used for a JoJo Siwa birthday party? Yes, and they are well-suited to this use. The collection spans portrait pages, performance pages, Bow Bow pages, rainbow and unicorn themes, and holiday content – enough variety to create a complete birthday party activity station and decoration set. See the Birthday Party Pack craft activity in the section above for a specific guide to making the collection work as coordinated party decoration at three scales. The pages are completely free to print in any quantity needed for party use.
Are the unicorn and rainbow pages connected to JoJo’s brand specifically? Yes. JoJo Siwa’s visual brand has always incorporated unicorns, rainbows, and the maximally colorful, sparkle-forward aesthetic that these images represent. Her merchandise – clothing, accessories, toys, home products – consistently used these visual elements as organizing motifs. The unicorn pages in this collection are not generic unicorn pages adapted to a JoJo context; they reflect an authentic connection between her brand identity and these specific visual themes.
Browse the full collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com. All 90+ pages free, no sign-up, PDF or PNG, print at home or color online.
JoJo Siwa started competing in dance when she was five years old. By the time she was twelve, she was on national television. By the time she was fourteen, she had a partnership with Nickelodeon, a song with 800 million views, and a bow that millions of children were wearing to school. The thing that connected all of it – the dancing, the music, the bow, the brand – was a consistent message that a generation of young children received from someone not much older than they were: be yourself, loudly and without apology.
Pick up your most vivid colors. Start with the bow. Color something that says what you mean.
Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #Coloringpagesonly. We especially want to see the inspiration wall displays and the custom bow designs.
Color the bow. Love who you are. Keep being you.
