Free Sing Coloring Pages: 50+ printable PDF pages featuring Buster Moon, Rosita, Gunter, Ash, Johnny, Mike, Meena, the Sing 2 looks, and full-cast stage scenes. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.

A Sing page works on two levels at once. Every character is a different animal, with its own fur, skin, or quills, and also a performer standing under stage lights. One sheet asks for soft koala grey and a neat checked jacket. The next wants a microphone, a spotlight, and a costume that shines. That mix of animal textures and stage scenes is what makes the collection more varied than a single-character set.

Sing is the Illumination musical where koala showman Buster Moon stages a singing contest to save his struggling theater, and a lineup of unlikely animal performers steps up to compete. That cast gives these pages a clear creative direction: animal fur and skin tones, signature character colors, bright stage costumes, and group scenes. Younger fans can start with large, simple single-character pages, while older kids and teens can take on the busy lineups and stage backdrops.

They suit a wide range of ages and skill levels, from quick solo pages to detailed group scenes, and work just as well at home or in the classroom. These are fan coloring activities and are not official film stills, posters, merchandise, or endorsed Sing products.

Quick Answer

Sing coloring pages are a free set of 50+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets featuring the full Moon Theater cast, the Sing 2 looks, and crowded stage scenes. They suit anyone who likes music, performance, and animal characters, and they range from a quick solo character to a busy ensemble backdrop.

Best for: Sing and Sing 2 fans, animal-movie fans, younger kids, older kids, teens, parents, and teachers. 

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring. 

Popular characters: Buster Moon, Rosita, Gunter, Ash, Johnny, Mike, Meena, Miss Crawly, and Nana Noodleman. 

Creative uses: theater playbills, audition cards, mini paper stages, finger puppets, and song bookmarks

What’s Inside Sing Coloring Pages

Buster Moon Coloring Pages

Buster is a koala, so his fur sits in soft grey with a lighter muzzle and chest, finished by a checked jacket and the wide, hopeful smile that carries the whole film.

Coloring Buster Moon: keep the fur a light, even grey, and save your darker grey for just the edges of his ears and arms. Color the jacket in two clear tones so the checks stay readable, and leave the eyes and smile clean so his optimism reads at a glance.

Rosita and Gunter Pages

Rosita is a soft pink pig and a busy mother of twenty-five piglets. Gunter is her dance partner, a round pig who never performs without a shiny suit. Plenty of sheets show the two of them mid-routine.

Coloring the pig duo: give Rosita a gentle, even pink with a warmer blush on the cheeks and ears. For Gunter, lay the pig pink first, then treat the suit as a separate, brighter layer. Yellows, blues, and a few highlight dots make the sequins pop without burying the character.

Ash the Porcupine Pages

Ash is a teenage porcupine and the band’s rocker, so her quills are the star of every sheet: reddish-pink, spiky, and full of movement, usually with a guitar close by.

Coloring Ash’s quills: work them from a warm red base into deeper red tips so they look sharp and layered. Keep her face and the hard details, such as studs, strings, and a band tee, darker and tighter, so the soft spikes and the rock gear play off each other.

Johnny the Gorilla Pages

Johnny is a young gorilla with a soulful voice and a piano. His fur is dark, his expression is gentle, and his sheets reward patient shading more than bright color.

Coloring Johnny: instead of flat black, build the fur from a dark base with a slightly lighter grey-brown on the chest, shoulders, and brow so the shape does not flatten. Drop in the darkest tone last, only in the creases, and keep the eyes warm and open.

Mike the Mouse Pages

Mike is a white mouse with a big attitude, a gold saxophone, and a tiny car. He is small in the frame, so his props do a lot of the work.

Coloring Mike: leave the white fur mostly pale and shape it with light grey shadows only, since too much color stops him from reading as white. Then let the saxophone shine with golds and a couple of bright highlights so the instrument carries the picture.

Meena the Elephant Pages

Meena is a shy teenage elephant with an enormous voice and even bigger eyes. Her sheets are large and calm, which makes them friendly for younger colorists.

Coloring Meena: keep her skin a soft grey with the faintest warm or pink undertone in the ears, and spend your time on the eyes, which should stay large, clean, and expressive. Her wide shapes are forgiving, so this is a good page for practicing smooth, even shading.

Sing 2 Coloring Pages

The sequel takes the cast to Redshore City for a bigger, flashier show, so these sheets bring new costumes, brighter stage looks, and a sci-fi production number.

Coloring the Sing 2 pages: start from each character’s familiar base color, then go bolder on the costumes and lighting than you would for the first film. Stronger contrast and brighter accents match the scale of the Redshore stage.

Full-Cast and Stage-Scene Pages

Some sheets put the whole company together: lineups of the main cast, the animals packed into a car, and side characters like assistant Miss Crawly, theater legend Nana Noodleman, and Buster’s sheep friend Eddie.

Coloring full-cast pages: the trick here is unity. Pick a small, shared palette and repeat a few of the same accent colors across the group, so a stage full of different species still reads as one cast rather than several separate drawings.

Printable PDF and Online Sing Coloring Pages

Every design comes in two ways, so you can pick whatever fits the moment: a printable PDF for paper, or the same artwork colored on screen.

Using printable and online Sing pages: print the PDF when you want a clean, crisp sheet for crayons, pencils, or markers, and use the on-screen option when there is no printer nearby. The PDF holds its line quality on standard letter or A4 paper.

What These Pages Do

Sing pages do something a single-character set cannot. They hand you a whole company of different animals and a stage to put them on, and that range is the point. Across the collection, you move through koala grey, pig pink, porcupine red, gorilla dark, mouse white, and elephant grey, so one printout becomes light practice at switching palettes and textures. The group and stage scenes go further and ask a colorist to plan a picture: where the light falls, which character leads, and how to keep a crowded stage reading as one show. For more of this world, the Cartoons coloring pages hub and the same studio’s Despicable Me coloring pages are natural next stops, and anyone drawn to the animal cast can branch into Zootopia coloring pages, elephant coloring pages for more of Meena’s kind, or pig coloring pages for Rosita and Gunter.

There is a quieter benefit, too, and it fits this film in particular. Sing is a story about nerves and courage. Meena freezes on stage, Johnny has to find his own voice, and Rosita reinvents herself after years at home. Coloring those same characters gives a shy child a low-pressure way to spend time with a performance they fully control. The American Art Therapy Association is careful to separate clinical art therapy, a credentialed mental-health profession, from everyday coloring, which it describes as recreation and self-care. That line is worth keeping honest. Even so, the idea underneath it, that making something by hand can ease stress and open up self-expression, is exactly why a familiar character on paper lands so well. It also fits the view of the American Academy of Pediatrics, which points to open-ended play, including simple things like crayons and paper, as a way for children to relax, regulate emotions, and step back from screens. A movie kids already love is an easy reason to reach for the pencils instead of a tablet.

How to Color Sing Coloring Pages

The tips above cover each character’s colors. This part is about the order to work in, which keeps any Sing page clean, no matter who you pick.

Decide where the stage light comes from first. Before any color goes down, choose one direction for the light, usually a spotlight from above or the side. Knowing which side is bright and which is shadow keeps the whole page consistent.

Lay the animal’s base coat from light to dark. Put the lightest fur or skin tone over the whole character, then build shadows on top in the same color family. This is what stops the lighter animals from turning muddy.

Settle the face and eyes before the flashy parts. Finish the expression, with clean eyes and soft cheek shadows, while the page is still simple. Sing characters live on their faces, and it is far easier to add a sparkly suit or a spotlight around a finished face than to rescue one buried under them.

Add costumes, shine, and stage lights last. Save Gunter’s sequins, the gold of Mike’s sax, the curtains, and the glow of the spotlight for the end. Those bright accents read best sitting on top of color that has already settled.

Match the brightness to the scene. Let a calm solo portrait stay soft and even, and push the big ensemble pages with stronger contrast and brighter lights so the energy matches the show.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Sing Coloring Pages

Moon Theater Playbill

Color a single character, then fold a sheet of paper into a small program. Glue the character on the front and give the show a title.

List each animal inside as an “act,” and add a short line about the song or style they perform.

Audition Card Set

Print the main cast, color each one, and cut them into cards. Add a name, the instrument or style, and one short line about the act.

Stack them into a deck to sort, trade, or rank your favorite performers.

Mini Stage Diorama

Color a character along with a separate spotlight or curtain, then cut them out. Stand the character inside a shoebox or a folded card so it looks like a tiny lit stage.

A circle of yellow behind the figure makes an instant spotlight, and a strip of red paper becomes a curtain.

Finger-Puppet Cast

Color several characters, cut around them, and tape a small paper loop to the back of each so it fits over a finger.

Now you can run your own show on the edge of a desk, with one puppet singing while the others wait backstage.

Song Bookmark

Color a favorite character down a tall, thin strip, then add a border of music notes along the side. Write a song title or your own short line at the bottom.

Tape or laminate the strip so it holds up to daily use.

FAQ About Sing Coloring Pages

Are these Sing pages free to print? 

Yes. Every page is free, with no account, email, or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or color it on screen in the browser.

Can I color Sing pages online?

Yes. Each design can be colored directly with the on-site tool, which is handy when there is no printer nearby.

Which Sing characters are included? 

The collection covers the main Moon Theater cast: Buster Moon, Rosita, Gunter, Ash, Johnny, Mike, and Meena. It also includes side characters like Miss Crawly, Nana Noodleman, and Eddie, plus group and stage scenes.

Do you have Sing 2 coloring pages? 

Yes. Several pages show what Sing 2 looks like, including the Redshore City costumes and updated versions of the main cast.

What format is best for printing? 

Use the PDF for the cleanest result. It prints sharply on standard letter or A4 paper and keeps the lines crisp for coloring.

Are these pages good for younger children?

Yes. The single-character pages, especially Meena and Buster, have large, rounded shapes that suit ages 4 and up. The busier ensemble scenes are a better fit for older kids.

Which pages are best for beginners?

Start with one character on a plain background, such as Meena, Buster, or Rosita, before moving on to group lineups or stage scenes with lights and props.

What colors are the main Sing characters? 

Buster is soft grey with a checked jacket, Rosita is pink, Gunter is pink in a bright sparkly suit, Ash has reddish-pink quills, Johnny is a dark gorilla, Mike is a white mouse, and Meena is grey with big eyes.

Can teachers use these pages in class? 

Yes. They work for free-time coloring, music, or drama units, and group projects like building a class show with playbills and character cards.

What crafts can I make with these pages? 

Popular options include a Moon Theater playbill, an audition card set, a mini stage diorama, finger puppets of the cast, and music-note bookmarks.

More Cartoons, Movies, and Animal Coloring Pages

Browse the full set at ColoringPagesOnly.com, then open any design to print it or color it on screen.

These Sing pages are made for personal, classroom, and fan-art coloring use, and they suit fans of all ages. Fans create them and are not affiliated with or endorsed by the makers of Sing.

For the final pass, make the page feel like one show. Keep each animal’s base color clean, let the costumes and spotlight carry the brightness, and leave the faces clear so the cast still reads at a glance.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We would love to see your playbills, audition cards, and finger-puppet shows.

These related coloring collections will help you explore more cartoon characters, animal pages, and movie coloring.

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.