Star vs. the Forces of Evil coloring pages: 60+ free printable PDF designs featuring Star Butterfly, Marco Diaz, Tom Lucitor, Pony Head, Ludo, Moon Butterfly, King Butterfly, Toffee, Glossaryck, Hekapoo, Rhombulus, Omnitraxus Prime, Lekmet, Jackie Lynn Thomas, Janna, Kelly, and more from the Disney XD animated series. Every page is available to download as a PDF or color directly in the browser, with no account or payment required.
Star vs. the Forces of Evil is an animated series created by Daron Nefcy and produced by Disney Television Animation, premiering on Disney XD on March 30, 2015. It follows Star Butterfly, a princess from the magical dimension of Mewni who is sent to Earth as a foreign exchange student after accidentally nearly destroying her kingdom’s castle. There, she befriends Marco Diaz, a Mexican-American teenager, and the two travel between Earth and other dimensions while protecting Star’s magic wand.
These pages suit fans of the series, Disney animation fans, and anyone who enjoys magical girl aesthetics combined with action and humor. With 60+ designs covering the full cast, the set works well as a standalone collection or alongside other Disney XD shows.
One coloring detail that belongs only to this show: Star Butterfly’s cheek marks. She has small hearts on each cheek that change in intensity and appearance depending on her emotional state and how much magic she is using. They are always pink in casual portraits, but on pages showing her mid-spell or in action, they shift. Getting those marks right and keeping them consistent across multiple pages is the most character-specific coloring task in the entire set.
Quick Answer
Star vs. the Forces of Evil coloring pages are a free set of 60+ printable PDFs and browser-based coloring sheets from the Disney XD animated series, covering the main characters, supporting cast, villains, and members of the High Commission of Magic.
Best for: children aged 7 and up, fans of the series, and anyone who enjoys magical girl animation and fantasy character design
Formats: printable PDF and online coloring
Popular pages: Star Butterfly solo and action pages, Star and Marco paired scenes, Pony Head, Tom Lucitor, and the High Commission members
Creative uses: a full cast portrait gallery, a Star and Marco relationship timeline display, a villain showcase, and a High Commission of Magic panel
What’s Inside Star vs. the Forces of Evil Coloring Pages
The set covers the full main cast across solo portraits, expression studies, paired scenes, and group compositions, with the largest share of pages going to Star Butterfly.
Star Butterfly
Star dominates the set with over twenty pages, ranging from quiet solo portraits to dynamic action scenes where she is mid-spell. The range covers her full emotional spectrum: happy, sad, surprised, determined, silly, and in love. Several pages show her using her wand, which opens up the most interesting coloring choices in the set.
Coloring Star: Star has long blonde hair and a blue and pink princess dress in her most recognizable outfit. Her cheek marks are the detail that requires the most attention: two small pink heart shapes on each cheek. In casual portraits, these are simply flat pink. On action or spell pages, they can be treated with more intensity, slightly brighter, or with a glow effect, to reflect how they animate on screen. Star’s wand is a yellow star shape, typically depicted in a warm golden yellow. The rainbow effects she creates when casting spells are the most vivid and free-form color opportunities in the set.
Marco Diaz
Marco appears in roughly fifteen pages, including solo portraits, paired scenes with Star, and a group scene with Tom Lucitor. His design is simpler than Star’s, which makes him a reliable coloring anchor in busy group pages.
Coloring Marco: Marco has tan skin, dark brown hair, and consistently wears his signature red hoodie over a grey shirt with dark jeans. The red hoodie is his most important identifying color and should stay a clear, warm red on every page he appears. He also has a small mole on his right cheek, a detail worth preserving on close-up portrait pages.
Tom Lucitor
Tom, Star’s demon ex-boyfriend and eventual friend, has his own dedicated pages and appears with both Star and Marco.
Coloring Tom: Tom is a demon with lavender-purple skin, three red eyes, and dark hair. He wears a dark outfit with red accents. His purple skin against red eyes is the most unusual color combination in the human cast: keeping the purple clearly purple rather than grey is the key decision on his pages. When he is shown calm, his eyes are a warm red; when angry, they glow brighter.
Pony Head
Pony Head, Star’s best friend from Mewni, is literally a flying unicorn head with a rainbow-colored mane and no body. She appears in several solo pages and in scenes alongside Star.
Coloring Pony Head: the mane is the most vivid element on any Pony Head page, a full spectrum rainbow from red through violet. Her skin is a warm cream-white. The mane works best when the rainbow colors are graded smoothly rather than separated into hard blocks. She is one of the most colorful characters in the entire set.
Ludo and Toffee
Ludo, the small and incompetent villain of the early seasons, and Toffee, the calculating lizard-man antagonist, each have their own pages.
Coloring Ludo: Ludo is small, round, and pale green, with large eyes and an oversized skull helmet. His color palette is muted and slightly dingy, which suits his character: even his attempts at menace read as cartoonishly harmless.
Coloring Toffee: Toffee is tall, angular, and deliberately unsettling. He wears a grey suit and has pale green reptilian skin with a calm, composed expression. His pages work best when treated with cool, restrained tones that reflect his controlled personality.
Moon Butterfly, King Butterfly, and the Royal Family
Moon, Star’s powerful and complicated mother, and King River, her warm and eccentric father, each have their own pages, plus a family group scene.
Coloring Moon: Moon has silver-white hair, deep navy blue regal attire, and a wand with a moon shape. She is the most visually formal character in the set. Her pages suit a more restrained palette than Star’s: deep blues, silvers, and quiet purples.
Coloring King River: King River has a broad, warm build, a reddish beard, and a casual approach to royalty. His pages are among the warmest and most cheerful in the royal cast.
The High Commission of Magic
The High Commission is one of the most visually inventive groups in the show, with four members who are each unlike anything in a conventional animated cast: Hekapoo, a flame-haired woman who creates dimensional scissors; Rhombulus, whose head and hands are crystal and who can encase things in ice; Omnitraxus Prime, a giant creature made of stars and space; and Lekmet, an elderly goat-man.
Coloring the High Commission: each member has a completely distinct visual language. Hekapoo’s fire hair is the warmest element, ranging from orange to red-gold. Rhombulus’s crystal head is translucent and refractive: a light, icy blue with white highlights works well. Omnitraxus Prime works best in deep space blues and purples with bright star-white points. Lekmet is the most traditional-looking of the four, in warm, earthy tones with a soft goat’s face.
Glossaryck
Glossaryck, the small blue spiritual guide who lives inside Star’s magic book, has two dedicated pages.
Coloring Glossaryck: Glossaryck is a tiny, ancient, blue-skinned figure with a white beard and an all-knowing half-smile. He wears a simple robe. The pale blue skin is the primary color decision; the rest of the page is mostly white and neutral.
Jackie Lynn Thomas, Janna, and Kelly
The three Earth-based supporting characters each have their own pages, capturing the more grounded, contemporary visual style of the Echo Creek characters.
Coloring the Earth characters: Jackie is a skateboarder with blonde hair and a laid-back, casual outfit in earth greens and tans. Janna has dark hair and a goth-adjacent aesthetic in blacks and purples. Kelly has a distinctive look with a large pinkish-red ponytail and a relaxed expression.
Printable PDF and Online Star vs. the Forces of Evil Coloring Pages
Every design is available as a printable PDF or for coloring in the browser. The High Commission pages and the Star action pages with spell effects, reward printing, and fine pencil work. Solo character portraits work well online.
What These Pages Do
Star vs. the Forces of Evil is unusual in how much emotional range it puts on screen. Star is not just a cheerful magical girl: she is confused, hurt, angry, in love, and scared across the series’ four seasons. Those sixty-plus pages capture all of that. The full emotional arc of the show is right there if you want it.
The show was also the first Disney XD series created by a woman, Daron Nefcy, and it shows how Star’s friendships with other women (Moon, Pony Head, Jackie) get as much care as her romantic storyline.
The AAP notes that children develop emotional vocabulary partly through engaging with characters who show a real range of feelings, especially in situations children know: belonging, friendship, and not quite fitting in.
Art therapy practitioners note that coloring a character across many emotional expressions helps children connect with who that character actually is, not just what they look like.
How to Color Star vs. the Forces of Evil Coloring Pages Well
Star’s cheek marks change. Treat them as a mood indicator. In quiet pages, flat pink hearts. In action or magic pages, increase the saturation or add a slight glow effect with a lighter pink in the center. This small change makes the same face read as two different emotional states.
Marco’s red hoodie is his identity. He appears on a lot of pages, and in every group scene, his red hoodie is the quickest visual shorthand for “this is Marco.” Keep it consistently the same warm red across every page, and he reads clearly even in busy compositions with Star’s more elaborate palette.
Tom’s purple skin should stay warm. A cool, grey-leaning purple makes him look washed out. A warm lavender-purple with slightly darker shadows gives him the vivid, slightly otherworldly look that suits a demon character trying to be a decent person.
The High Commission pages are character studies in restraint and contrast. Hekapoo’s fire hair against Rhombulus’s cool crystal, Lekmet’s earth tones against Omnitraxus Prime’s space palette: treating each as a deliberate study in contrast rather than just filling the shapes makes the group page feel like the show’s visual imagination at full stretch.
5 Creative Craft Ideas with Star vs. the Forces of Evil Coloring Pages
Star Cheek Marks Mood Board
Color three Star solo pages: one where she is happy, one where she is sad, and one where she is casting a spell. Keep the outfits identical but vary the cheek marks in intensity (flat pink, slightly brighter, most vivid). Display the three together.
A single character, three emotional states, one shared visual cue. Takes about twenty-five minutes.
Full Cast Portrait Gallery
Color one page each of the main cast (Star, Marco, Tom, Pony Head, Moon, Ludo) and arrange them on a large piece of card with names underneath.
The most complete display the set makes possible. Takes about forty-five minutes.
High Commission Panel
Color all four High Commission members (Hekapoo, Rhombulus, Omnitraxus Prime, and Lekmet) and arrange them side by side in a row. Add “The High Commission of Magic” written above.
Four characters with four completely different visual languages are displayed as a formal panel. Takes about thirty minutes.
Star and Marco Timeline
Color the earliest Star and Marco paired scene in the set alongside the most romantic one. Label them “Season 1” and “Season 4” and display them facing each other.
A two-page display of the relationship arc at its beginning and near its end. Takes about twenty minutes.
Villain Showcase
Color Ludo, Toffee, and a dark or intense Star page side by side on a black card. Label it “The Antagonists.”
The show’s two main villains plus Star in her most serious mode. Takes about twenty minutes.
FAQ About Star vs. the Forces of Evil Coloring Pages
Are these Star vs. the Forces of Evil 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 open it in the online coloring tool to color on screen.
What is Star vs. the Forces of Evil?
Star vs. the Forces of Evil is an animated series created by Daron Nefcy and produced by Disney Television Animation. It premiered on Disney XD on March 30, 2015, and ran for four seasons, ending on May 19, 2019. It was the first Disney XD series created by a woman. The show follows Star Butterfly, a princess from the dimension of Mewni, who is sent to Earth as a foreign exchange student, where she befriends Marco Diaz and the two protect her magic wand from villains.
Who is Star Butterfly?
Star Butterfly is the 14-year-old princess of the kingdom of Mewni, voiced by Eden Sher. She is energetic, chaotic, and deeply kind. She has long blonde hair, heart-shaped cheek marks, and a magic wand that she is still learning to control. She is the series’ main character across all four seasons.
Who is Marco Diaz?
Marco Diaz is a Mexican-American teenager from Echo Creek, California, voiced by Adam McArthur. He is Star’s best friend and eventual boyfriend. He is responsible, organized, and skilled in karate, and serves as the grounded counterpart to Star’s wild creativity. He has a mole on his right cheek and almost always wears a red hoodie.
Who is Tom Lucitor?
Tom Lucitor is a demon prince with lavender skin and three red eyes, voiced by Rider Strong. He is Star’s ex-boyfriend and later becomes a true friend to both Star and Marco. His character arc across the series centers on learning to manage his anger.
What are the cheek marks on Star?
Star’s heart-shaped cheek marks are a hereditary trait of the Butterfly royal family. Each queen who has wielded the royal magic wand develops distinctive cheek marks over time. Star’s marks shift in appearance depending on her emotional state, particularly when she is using powerful magic.
Are these official Star vs. the Forces of Evil coloring pages?
No. These are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with, licensed by, or endorsed by Disney Television Animation, Disney XD, or any other rights holder of Star vs. the Forces of Evil.
What age group is this set best suited for?
The show is rated TV-Y7, and the coloring pages match that range well. The solo portraits suit children from about age five, while the more complex group and villain pages are better suited to ages seven and up. Older fans of the show will find the full cast coverage of 60+ pages particularly satisfying.
Start Coloring
Download any page by clicking the design. No account, email, or payment is required. Pages print directly from the browser at full resolution or open in the online coloring tool for screen use. Share finished pages on Facebook or Pinterest using the share buttons at the top of each design page.
