Free Ratatouille Coloring Pages: 40+ printable PDF pages featuring Remy cooking and exploring, Emile, Linguini in the kitchen, Colette on her motorcycle, Chef Skinner, Auguste Gusteau, Anton Ego at lunch, Django, the rat family, and group scenes. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.

The coloring in this set runs on a deliberate tension between two worlds. The rat scenes, Remy and Emile with cheese, the rat family, Django, live in warm earth tones: grey-browns, muted ochres, and the soft, dirty-cream of fur. The kitchen scenes shift that completely: white chef coats against stainless steel surfaces, with the vivid colors of fresh vegetables and sauces as the only warm accent. Getting that gap right, keeping the rat world warm and organic while the kitchen world reads as clean, hard, and professional, is what gives each page its proper atmosphere.

The pages are divided into two types. Remy-focus pages, whether he is holding a spoon, smelling cheese, rowing, mopping the floor, or teaching Linguini how to cook, put the spotlight on a small grey rat in environments that dwarf him, and the coloring challenge is making him readable and expressive against whatever surface he is on. Scene and multi-character pages, Linguini with Colette, Anton Ego at lunch, the rat family, Anton with Alfredo and Colette looking at Remy, ask you to manage multiple characters across a shared setting without letting any one palette collapse into another. Simpler single-character pages suit younger fans and quick sessions; the detailed kitchen and group scene pages give older fans and adults more to work through.

These pages work well at home or as fan art for any viewer of the film. These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Pixar Animation Studios, Disney, or any rights holder of the Ratatouille franchise.

Quick Answer

Ratatouille coloring pages are a free set of 40+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets covering Remy, Emile, Linguini, Colette, Chef Skinner, Gusteau, Anton Ego, Django, the rat family, and kitchen and restaurant scenes. The contrast between the warm organic rat palette and the cool, precise kitchen world gives every page a built-in tonal logic to work with.

Best for: Ratatouille fans, Pixar and Disney fans, younger children, older kids, teens, adults, and anyone who enjoys character and food-themed coloring

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring

Popular characters: Remy, Emile, Linguini, Colette, Chef Skinner, Auguste Gusteau

Creative uses: fan art practice, kitchen scene coloring, rat character studies, Pixar film displays, and food and chef-themed art

What’s Inside Ratatouille Coloring Pages

Remy Coloring Pages

The largest group focuses on Remy across a wide range of actions and settings: Remy from Ratatouille, Remy holds the spoon, Remy is cooking, Remy adding seasoning, Remy smells the cheese, Remy with tasty cheese, Remy and cheese, Remy on the roof, Remy breaks the plate, Remy is having fun, Remy rowing, and Remy mopping the floor.

Coloring Remy: Remy is a small rat in grey-blue with a slightly warmer grey-brown on his back and ears, a pale cream belly, and pink inner ears and paws. His eyes are large and expressive, and his nose is a small, warm pink. In kitchen scenes, the clean whites and steels of the environment make his grey form stand out naturally. Keep his body grey-blue rather than neutral grey: the slight blue note is what makes him read as a character rather than a generic rodent.

Remy and Emile Pages

Emile, Remy’s larger and less refined brother, appears with Remy in several pages: Remy and Emile from Ratatouille, Remy and Emile steal cheese, funny Remy and Emile, and Tasty Salad for Remy and Emile.

Coloring Emile: Emile is the warmer, rounder, earthier counterpart to Remy’s cooler blue-grey. His coat is a medium warm brown with slightly darker ears and back, and he carries the cheerful, uncomplicated energy of someone who eats anything without judgment. On pages where the two brothers appear together, the warm-cool contrast between Emile’s brown and Remy’s blue-grey makes them visually distinct without any extra effort.

Linguini Coloring Pages

Alfredo Linguini appears in solo and scene pages: Alfredo Linguini from Ratatouille, Ratatouille Linguini in the kitchen, Linguini knocked over the bucket, Linguini chopping vegetables, Linguini talking to Remy, and Linguini and Remy from Ratatouille.

Coloring Linguini: Linguini is tall and lanky with a mop of curly auburn hair, a standard chef’s white jacket, and a generally overwhelmed expression. His hair is his most distinctive feature: a warm, saturated auburn-red that contrasts with the cool whites and steel greys of the kitchen around him. Keep the white chef coat genuinely white rather than cream: the clean professional white reads against his warm hair and gives the kitchen setting its proper tone.

Colette Tatou Pages

Colette appears in solo and scene pages: Colette Tatou from Ratatouille, Colette Tatou cooking, Colette Tatou beating eggs, Ratatouille Colette on the motorcycle talking to Linguini, and Linguini and Colette from Ratatouille.

Coloring Colette: Colette is the most visually distinctive human character in the set. Her hair is dark brown to near-black, her skin tone is warm olive, and her chef uniform is the same white as the others, but worn with more precision and authority. On the motorcycle page, she wears darker clothing, making her one of the few characters in this gallery to appear outside the kitchen white-and-steel palette. Her expressions are sharp and focused throughout.

Chef Skinner Pages

Chef Skinner, the restaurant’s autocratic head chef and antagonist, appears in four pages: Chef Skinner from Ratatouille, Ratatouille Chef Skinner tasting the soup, Ratatouille Chef Skinner reprimanding Linguini, and a shared scene with Linguini, Linguini, and Chef Skinner from Ratatouille.

Coloring Chef Skinner: Skinner is short and compact with dark hair, olive skin, and a chef coat that he wears with aggressive authority. His expressions run from suspicious to furious. The white chef coat and the intensity of his expression are his defining visual elements: keep the coat clean and the face actively expressive-a slightly cooler, more formal palette for his coat than Linguini’s suits his more rigid character.

Auguste Gusteau Pages

Auguste Gusteau, the deceased chef whose spirit guides Remy, appears in two pages: Auguste Gusteau from Ratatouille and Remy and Auguste Gusteau from Ratatouille.

Coloring Gusteau: Gusteau is a large, warm, round man in a white chef coat, with dark hair going grey at the temples and a generous expression that always reads as welcoming. He appears as a vision or spirit in the film, so a slightly softened or glowing quality to his coloring suits the ghostly nature of his appearances. A warm cream-white rather than stark white for his coat, with a pale warm light behind him, gives the spirit-guide pages the gentle, otherworldly quality they have in the film.

Anton Ego Pages

Anton Ego, the feared food critic, appears in two pages: Anton Ego is having lunch, and Anton Alfredo Colette is looking at Remy.

Coloring Anton Ego: Ego is one of the most visually extreme character designs in the film, impossibly thin with sunken cheeks, slicked-back dark grey hair, and always dressed in black. His dining room in the film is deliberately cold and unwelcoming: deep purple-grey walls, dark wood, and minimal light. On the lunch page, a dark palette suits the character: deep charcoal suit, pale grey-white skin, and a very controlled, precise expression.

Django, Rat Family, and Supporting Pages

Django, Remy’s father, appears on one page: Django from Ratatouille. The rat family appears as a group: Rat Family from Ratatouille. Mabel and two rats appear on one additional page.

Coloring Django and the rat family: Django is a darker, more weathered version of the rat palette, with a deeper brown-grey coat and a more guarded, protective expression than Emile’s cheerfulness. The rat family page features a large group of rats in the same warm brown and muted grey-brown tones, with small variations in shade to distinguish individuals. A warm, earthy environment tone behind them, dark soil, rough stone, fits the world they inhabit outside the kitchen.

Printable PDF and Online Ratatouille 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 pencils, markers, or fine-liners, and use the on-screen version when there is no printer available. The PDF holds the film’s expressive character linework cleanly on standard letter or A4 paper.

What These Pages Do

Ratatouille is built around the idea that great taste is available to anyone who pays close enough attention, and the film’s visual design carries that argument in every frame. The kitchen in Gusteau’s restaurant is lit and styled like a serious professional space: clean, cool, and precise. Remy’s world, the sewers and rooftops of Paris, is warm, organic, and slightly chaotic. Coloring through this set means moving between those two registers, and every decision about palette, warm or cool, clean or earthy, precise or loose, is a version of the film’s central question about who belongs in which world. That tonal thinking applies well beyond this set: the skill of reading an environment’s color temperature and matching characters to it is one of the most useful habits in any figure-and-setting coloring. From here, cartoon coloring pages are the parent hub. For Pixar’s emotional storytelling in other settings, Coco coloring pages and Luca coloring pages offer comparable depth, and food coloring pages and chef coloring pages extend the culinary theme.

The American Art Therapy Association describes everyday coloring as recreation and self-care rather than clinical therapy. For a Ratatouille fan, picking up a Remy page is exactly that: a calm, screen-free activity centered on a character and a world they find genuinely appealing. The American Academy of Pediatrics points to open-ended creative activities as a recognized part of healthy development in children, and the range of pages here, from the simple Remy with cheese page to the detailed multi-character kitchen scenes, gives children at different skill levels something genuinely suited to where they are.

How to Color Ratatouille Coloring Pages

These steps work for any page in the set, from a solo Remy portrait to a full kitchen scene.

Decide on the temperature of the setting first. Rat-world pages call for warm earth tones. Kitchen pages call for cool whites and steel greys with vivid food as the only warm accent. Committing to that choice before placing any color keeps each page feeling true to its setting.

Keep Remy’s grey-blue distinct from neutral grey. The slight blue note in his coat is what separates him visually from the warmer rats around him and from the cool steel grey of the kitchen. A warm grey reads as a different rat; a neutral grey reads as an appliance. The blue-grey is his.

On kitchen pages, treat white chef coats as the lightest tone. Use the coats as your key value: everything darker than the coats (dark hair, kitchen shadows, vivid garnishes) anchors the page, and everything lighter (highlights on steel, steam, lighting) lifts it. A warm cream coat on Gusteau versus a colder, clean white on Skinner or Colette subtly reinforces their different relationships to the kitchen.

Use food as a warm accent in cool kitchen scenes. Cheese, tomatoes, herbs, and sauces are the most saturated colors in any kitchen scene. Keep the structural elements (coats, steel, stone floors) cool and muted, and let the food colors be the page’s warmth. That is exactly how the film was lit.

On Anton Ego’s pages, go darker and more restrained than anywhere else in the set. His pages are the coldest and most formal. Deep charcoal for his suit, pale and slightly hollow for his face, and minimal color in the environment. The contrast between his scenes and the warmer kitchen pages mirrors the film’s own use of his character as a chill on the story’s warmth.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Ratatouille Coloring Pages

Two Worlds Side by Side

Color a rat-world page (Remy and Emile steal cheese or the rat family) and a kitchen-world page (Linguini in the kitchen or Colette cooking) in their contrasting palettes: warm earth tones for the rat world, cool whites and steels for the kitchen.

Pin them side by side to show the film’s central visual argument in a single image.

Remy in the Kitchen Study

Color one of the Remy-in-kitchen pages, such as Remy is cooking, or Remy holds the spoon, keeping Remy in his warm grey-blue while surrounding him with the cool kitchen whites and steel greys.

Display the finished page to show how a small warm form reads against a cool environment, a classic color composition technique.

Chef Team Portrait

Color one page per kitchen character: Linguini, Colette, and Chef Skinner, each in their white chef coat but with their distinct personal palette for hair, skin, and expression.

Arrange all three with name labels as a restaurant crew display showing how the same uniform reads differently on three very different people.

Anton Ego Critique Card

Color the Anton Ego is having lunch page in the coldest, most formal palette in the set: deep charcoal, pale grey skin, dark environment.

Write a short “review” in Ego’s voice on the back of a fan card that captures the character’s tone before the film’s key turning point.

Remy and Gusteau Duo

Color the Remy and Auguste Gusteau from Ratatouille page, giving Gusteau the soft glowing warmth of a spirit-guide presence and Remy his grounded grey-blue.

Display as a fan piece capturing the film’s central mentor relationship and its message that anyone can cook.

FAQ About Ratatouille Coloring Pages

Are these Ratatouille 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.

Which characters are included? 

The set covers Remy, Emile, Alfredo Linguini, Colette Tatou, Chef Skinner, Auguste Gusteau, Anton Ego, Django, and the rat family, across solo, duo, and group scene pages, plus cooking and kitchen action pages.

What is Ratatouille? 

Ratatouille is a Pixar animated film released by Disney in 2007, directed by Brad Bird. It follows Remy, a rat with an extraordinary sense of taste and smell who dreams of becoming a chef in Paris, and Alfredo Linguini, a young kitchen worker who helps him pursue that dream at the famous Gusteau’s restaurant. The film won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. You can read more on the Wikipedia page.

What colors should I use for Remy? 

Remy’s coat is a grey-blue, slightly cooler than neutral grey, with a pale cream belly and warm pink inner ears and paws. Keep the blue note in his grey: it is what distinguishes him visually from the other rats and from the kitchen’s steel grey surfaces.

What colors should I use for Linguini?

Linguini wears a white chef coat and has a mop of warm auburn-red curly hair. His skin is a light, warm tone, and his expression is usually anxious or surprised. The auburn hair is his most distinctive feature and should be warm and saturated against the cool white of his coat.

What makes Anton Ego different from color? 

Ego is designed as the coldest character in the film: impossibly thin, always dressed in black or very dark grey, with sunken pale features. His pages suit the deepest, most restrained palette in the set, with almost no warm color. That deliberate coldness is what makes his eventual change of heart so visually striking.

Are these pages good for younger children? Yes. The simpler Remy with cheese pages, the Remy from Ratatouille page, and the Emile pages with cleaner outlines suit younger children well. The detailed kitchen scenes and multi-character group pages are better suited to older fans.

Are there pages showing cooking and kitchen scenes? 

Yes. Many pages show characters actively cooking: Remy is cooking, Remy adding seasoning, Remy teaching Linguini cooking, Remy helping Linguini cook, Linguini chopping vegetables, Colette cooking, Colette beating eggs, and Chef Skinner tasting the soup.

Are these official Disney or Pixar coloring pages? 

No. They are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with Pixar Animation Studios, Disney, or any rights holder of the Ratatouille franchise.

What crafts can I make with these pages? 

Popular options include a two-worlds side-by-side display, a Remy in the kitchen color study, a chef team portrait, an Anton Ego critique card, and a Remy and Gusteau duo piece.

More Cartoon and Pixar 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 official products of Pixar Animation Studios or Disney.

For the final pass: decide the temperature of the setting first, keep Remy’s grey-blue distinct from neutral grey, and treat white chef coats as the lightest tone on any kitchen page. Those three habits apply to every page in the set.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We would love to see your two worlds displays, kitchen studies, and chef team portraits.

These related coloring collections will help you explore the wonderful world of colors. Let’s choose, be creative, and show us your great pictures!

Jennifer Thoa – Content Editor & Designer

Jennifer Thoa is Content Editor and Designer at ColoringPagesOnly.com. Degree in Journalism and Creative Writing, University of Kansas. She writes and edits long-form educational articles on anime, film, animals, world cultures, and automotive history - verified against named primary sources before publication.