Free LV Coloring Pages: 20+ printable PDF pages featuring the Louis Vuitton monogram pattern, LV logos, a handbag, shoes, scarves, a 3D design, sticker pages, and fun cartoon and Disney collaboration designs including Minnie Mouse and Bugs Bunny. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.
The LV monogram is one of the most carefully constructed patterns in fashion history. The interlocking L and V sit inside a repeating grid of quatrefoil shapes and four-petal flowers, all spaced with precise symmetry. Coloring it well means respecting that geometry: keeping each motif consistent, deciding whether to go with the classic warm brown-on-tan palette, a bold monochrome black and white, or something entirely your own, and making the repetition feel intentional rather than mechanical.
The pages are divided into two types of challenges. Pattern and logo pages demand careful, even fills and consistent spacing across a repeating surface. Product and collab pages, the handbag, the shoes, the Minnie Mouse and Bugs Bunny designs, add shape, shadow, and character expression on top of the monogram. Both suit fans of the brand, anyone who enjoys decorative or pattern coloring, or anyone who wants to practice the precise, satisfying work of coloring a repeating motif. Simpler logo and sticker pages suit younger children and quick sessions; the detailed pattern and product pages give older fans and adults more to focus on.
These pages work well at home, in a creative session, or as fan art for any admirer of the brand. These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Louis Vuitton, LVMH, or any rights holder of the Louis Vuitton brand.
Quick Answer
LV coloring pages are a free set of 20+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets covering monogram patterns and logos, branded products including a handbag, shoes, and scarves, a 3D design, sticker pages, and fun cartoon and Disney collab versions. The combination of precise geometric pattern work and expressive product and character designs makes this set interesting for fans of luxury fashion as well as anyone who enjoys decorative coloring.
Best for: Louis Vuitton fans, fashion lovers, older kids and adults, and anyone who enjoys pattern or decorative coloring.
Formats: printable PDF and online coloring.
Popular styles: LV monogram pattern, logo pages, handbags and shoes, and Disney cartoon collaboration designs.
Creative uses: fashion fan art, pattern coloring practice, luxury brand study, gift wrapping inspiration, and monogram design exploration
What’s Inside LV Coloring Pages
LV Logo and Monogram Pages
Several sheets focus on the LV logo and the signature monogram: the classic interlocking LV, a logo-only design, an LV symbolism page, and the repeating monogram pattern itself.
Coloring the monogram and logo: the classic Louis Vuitton palette is warm brown for the motifs on a tan or cream background. That combination reads immediately as the authentic look. For something bolder, a black monogram on white keeps the geometric precision front and center. Whichever palette you choose, consistency is everything: the same tone used on the first LV should appear on every other LV across the pattern.
LV Handbag and Product Pages
Other sheets put the monogram on actual products: a classic Louis Vuitton handbag, an LV bag, and the Jasper shoe design.
Coloring the handbag: treat the bag as two layers. First, fill the monogram canvas in whatever palette you have chosen, keeping the repeat even and the spacing consistent. Then handle the leather trim, handles, and hardware separately: warm tan or honey for natural leather, gold for the metal clasps and studs, and a slightly darker shadow at the base of the handles where they meet the canvas.
LV Scarves and Fashion Pages
Two pages cover LV-branded scarves, and one shows a Louis Vuitton fashion scene.
Coloring scarves and fashion: scarves are a chance to introduce a broader color range. The monogram can stay in its classic warm tones while the scarf background takes a bolder accent color: deep burgundy, navy, or forest green, all of which work against the brown-and-tan motifs. The fashion page suits editorial-style choices: bold contrast, confident strokes, and a strong background.
Louis Vuitton 3D and Sticker Pages
The 3D Louis Vuitton page and the sticker design present the brand in a more graphic, dimensional style.
Coloring the 3D and sticker pages: the 3D page rewards careful light-and-shadow work. Decide where the light source is, keep the highlights bright and the shadows cool, and let the LV motifs show through the dimensional form. The sticker page suits flat, bold fills that will read clearly at a small size, matching the look of a printed luxury sticker.
Disney and Cartoon Collaboration Pages
Three pages show Louis Vuitton in playful collab mode: Minnie Mouse in LV, Louis Vuitton feat Disney Baby Minnie, and Louis Vuitton Bugs Bunny, as well as a general cartoon version and a Louis Vuitton ice cream design.
Coloring the collab pages: these are the most expressive pages in the set. The LV elements stay in their signature tones, but Minnie Mouse, Baby Minnie, and Bugs Bunny each bring their own classic palette: red and white polka dots for Minnie, grey and white for Bugs. The ice cream page invites any flavor palette. Keeping the LV branding accurate while letting the character colors be vivid is what makes these pages feel like real collabs rather than just fan sketches.
Printable PDF and Online LV 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 fine-liners, pencils, or markers, and use the on-screen version when there is no printer nearby. The PDF holds the fine linework of the monogram and logo details cleanly on standard letter or A4 paper.
What These Pages Do
The LV monogram is not just a logo: it is one of the most recognized patterns in the world and one of the most precisely constructed. Georges Vuitton designed it in 1896 as a repeating grid of interlocking initials, quatrefoils, and flowers, and the same spacing and proportions have been held almost unchanged ever since. Coloring a page from this set means working with that visual system directly. Getting the monogram to read correctly is not about memorizing the brand; it is about understanding what makes a repeating pattern cohere: consistent spacing, consistent tone, and the relationship between positive and negative space. That is a genuine design skill that applies to anything with a repeating motif, from fabric patterns to architectural ornament to wallpaper. The collab pages add a different kind of value: they show how a single visual identity adapts to completely different characters and contexts while staying instantly recognizable, which is its own lesson in how strong brand design works. From here, fashion coloring pages is the parent hub, and Gucci coloring pages offer the same kind of luxury-brand visual study from another iconic house. For the pure pattern angle, mandala coloring pages and pattern coloring pages extend the same kind of precise, repeating-motif work.
The American Art Therapy Association describes everyday coloring as recreation and self-care rather than clinical therapy, and for a Louis Vuitton fan, coloring the monogram is exactly that: a focused, screen-free way to spend time with an aesthetic they love. For younger colorists, the American Academy of Pediatrics points to pattern-based, hands-on activities as a support for fine-motor development and visual pattern recognition, and working carefully through a repeating motif like the LV monogram gives small hands exactly that kind of precise, rewarding practice.
How to Color LV Coloring Pages
These steps work for any page in the set, from a single logo to the full monogram pattern.
Decide the palette before you start. The classic brown-on-tan, bold black-on-white, or an inventive custom scheme all work, but committing to one before touching the page keeps the result looking intentional. Mixed palettes without a plan are the most common reason a monogram page loses its luxury feel.
Work the pattern in passes, not cell by cell. On any repeating monogram page, color all the LV initials first in one pass, then all the quatrefoils, then all the four-petal flowers. Working by element type rather than by position keeps the tone perfectly consistent across the whole surface.
Treat the background as part of the design. The contrast between the monogram motifs and the background tone is what makes the pattern readable. A slightly darker background (warm tan rather than white) brings the motifs forward without requiring any shading on the motifs themselves.
On product pages, handle canvas and hardware separately. Color the monogram canvas first, then the leather trim, then the metal hardware. Keeping these three materials visually distinct, even on a flat coloring page, is what gives the bag or shoe a sense of construction.
On collab pages, let the character’s classic colors stay true. Minnie’s red bow and white polka dots, Bugs Bunny’s grey fur and white gloves, these should stay recognizable. Let the LV elements anchor one part of the page and let the character anchor the other.
5 Creative Craft Ideas with LV Coloring Pages
Monogram Palette Study
Color the same LV pattern page three times: once in the classic brown-on-tan, once in black and white, and once in a personal color scheme.
Pin all three side by side to see how the same geometric design changes character with each palette, the same exercise used in brand identity workshops.
Luxury Gift Wrap Design
Color a full monogram pattern page, then use it as decorative wrapping paper for a small gift or as a gift tag backing.
The finished page makes a handmade luxury-themed gift presentation that references the brand’s visual language.
Collab Character Comparison
Color the Minnie Mouse LV, Baby Minnie LV, and Bugs Bunny LV pages side by side, keeping each character’s classic colors accurate while matching the LV elements across all three.
Display them together as a triptych showing how the same brand identity adapts to three different characters.
Fashion Illustration Study
Color the Louis Vuitton fashion page as a full editorial illustration: bold contrast, strong shadows, and an expressive background.
Use it as a starting point for a hand-drawn fashion illustration practice, adding your own accessories or background details around the main figure.
LV Monogram Reference Card
Color a small logo or monogram page carefully and accurately, labeling the three main motif elements: the interlocking LV initials, the quatrefoil, and the four-petal flower.
Keep it as a personal reference card for the next time you color any LV page in the set.
FAQ About LV Coloring Pages
Are these LV 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.
What styles of LV pages are included?
The set covers the LV monogram pattern, logo, and symbolism pages, a handbag, shoes, scarves, a 3D design, sticker pages, a cartoon version, an ice cream design, and Disney collab pages featuring Minnie Mouse, Baby Minnie, and Bugs Bunny.
What is the LV monogram?
The LV monogram is Louis Vuitton’s signature repeating pattern, created in 1896 by Georges Vuitton, son of the founder. It features the interlocking initials L and V surrounded by quatrefoil shapes and four-petal flowers. Georges designed it both as a tribute to his late father and as a way to protect the brand’s products from counterfeiting. It has remained almost unchanged for over 125 years. You can read more on the Wikipedia page for Louis Vuitton.
What colors should I use for the LV monogram?
The original monogram canvas uses a tan or cream background with brown motifs. That combination reads immediately as the authentic LV look. A black-on-white version gives a bold, graphic look. Both are recognizable as LV. Avoid colors that are too similar in tone, as the contrast between motif and background is what makes the pattern readable.
Are these pages good for younger children?
The simpler logo, sticker, and cartoon pages suit younger children well. The detailed monogram pattern and product pages, with their precise repeating motifs, are a better fit for older children, teens, and adults who want a more focused coloring challenge.
What makes the LV monogram difficult to color?
The challenge is consistency across a repeating pattern. Every LV initial, every quatrefoil, and every four-petal flower needs to be the same tone as the others across the whole page. Working in passes by element type, rather than filling each cell individually, is the most reliable approach.
Are the Disney collab pages based on real collaborations?
The Disney character designs (Minnie Mouse, Baby Minnie, Bugs Bunny) are fan-made coloring pages inspired by Louis Vuitton’s real history of character and artist collaborations. They are not officially licensed products of Louis Vuitton or Disney.
Are there product pages like bags and shoes?
Yes. The set includes a classic Louis Vuitton handbag, an LV bag, the Jasper shoe design, and LV scarves, all featuring the monogram canvas.
Are these official Louis Vuitton coloring pages?
No. They are fan-made coloring sheets for personal, non-commercial use and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Louis Vuitton, LVMH, or any other rights holder of the Louis Vuitton brand.
What crafts can I make with these pages?
Popular options include a monogram palette study, luxury gift wrap, a collab character comparison triptych, a fashion illustration study, and an LV monogram reference card.
More Fashion and Pattern 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 affiliated with or endorsed by Louis Vuitton or the Louis Vuitton brand.
For the final pass, commit to one palette, work the pattern in passes by element type, and keep the monogram motifs consistent across the whole surface. Those three habits apply to every page in this set.
Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We would love to see your palette studies, collab triptychs, and fashion illustrations.
