Free Toy Story Coloring Pages: 100+ printable PDF sheets featuring Sheriff Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Jessie, Rex, Hamm, Slinky Dog, Mr. Potato Head, Bo Peep, and the rest of Andy’s toy box, plus group scenes and cute chibi designs. All free, download the PDF to print, or color online.

What makes a Toy Story set different from a typical movie collection is that every character is a different kind of toy. Woody is stitched cloth, Buzz is molded plastic, Slinky is coiled metal, Hamm is a ceramic piggy bank, and Rex is hollow vinyl. So a single page is never just one world to color; it is a shelf of surfaces, each one asking for a slightly different touch. That turns a simple character lineup into quiet practice with texture: where to leave a shine on Buzz’s helmet, how to keep Woody’s shirt looking soft, how to make Hamm read as smooth and round.

Toy Story is the Disney and Pixar franchise that began in 1995 as the first feature film made entirely with computer animation. Across four films, it follows a group of toys, led by the pull-string cowboy Woody and the space ranger Buzz Lightyear, who come to life whenever people are not watching. Under the adventure and the famous Woody-and-Buzz rivalry, it is really a story about loyalty and belonging, which is why the cast is such a warm, varied group to color.

Younger fans can begin with the chibi pages and simple single-character portraits. Older kids, longtime fans, and adults can take on Buzz’s detailed armor, busy toy-box group scenes, and full action poses. These pages suit a range of ages and skill levels and work at home or in the classroom. They are fan coloring activities and are not official film stills, posters, merchandise, or endorsed Toy Story products.

Quick Answer

Toy Story coloring pages are free printable PDF and online coloring sheets featuring Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Jessie, and the rest of the toy box, including Rex, Hamm, Slinky, Mr. Potato Head, and Bo Peep, plus group scenes and chibi versions. They are useful for character coloring, texture practice, party favors, bookmarks, classroom art breaks, and screen-free creative time.

Best for: Toy Story fans, Disney and Pixar fans, younger kids, older kids, parents, teachers, and fan-art activities 

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring 

Popular themes: Woody’s plaid shirt, Buzz Lightyear’s space armor, Jessie’s red-and-cow-print cowgirl gear, Rex the dinosaur, toy-box group scenes, and cute chibi designs 

Creative uses: toy-box display posters, character bookmarks, birthday-party favors, friendship cards, and Pixar fan folders

What is Inside Toy Story Coloring Pages

Woody Coloring Pages

Woody is the heart of the collection and the most recognizable cowboy in the toy box. He is easy to spot: a yellow shirt with a red plaid pattern, a cowhide vest, blue jeans, a brown holster, and his wide-brimmed sheriff’s hat, usually with a friendly grin.

His shirt is what makes him interesting to color. It is the one classic plaid in the whole set, so it rewards a careful hand: lay the yellow base down evenly first, then add the red checks on top in clean rows so the pattern stays sharp instead of going muddy. The cowhide vest is a nice contrast, a place to leave soft, irregular markings rather than one flat fill.

These pages work well for character cards, toy-box posters, and portrait practice, and they pair naturally with Buzz in the many two-character scenes.

Coloring Woody pages: Lay the yellow shirt down first, add the red plaid checks on top in even rows, keep the vest a soft cowhide tone with loose markings, and leave the sheriff’s badge crisp.

Buzz Lightyear Coloring Pages

Buzz is Woody’s rival-turned-best friend, and his pages bring the busiest, most detailed design in the set. He is a space ranger in a white suit covered with green and purple panels, with a clear domed helmet, a wrist panel, and pop-out wings. He is such a popular character that he has a whole Buzz Lightyear coloring page collection of his own, too.

The armor is the star, and it rewards a plan. Keep the suit mostly white, then use bright green for the large panels and purple for the smaller accents and buttons so the high-tech look holds together. Because his design is broken into so many small sections, Buzz is the best page in the collection for practicing neat, controlled coloring inside tight shapes, the opposite challenge to Woody’s flat plaid.

These pages suit colorists who like a design with lots of pieces to fill, and they balance well against Woody’s softer, warmer palette in shared scenes.

Coloring Buzz pages: Keep the suit white, fill the large panels in green and the accents in purple, color the wings last, and leave the helmet dome clear so it still looks like glass.

Jessie Coloring Pages

Jessie is the energetic yodeling cowgirl, and her pages are the brightest and most spirited in the toy box. She has long red hair in a single braid, a cowgirl hat, and a yellow shirt with white-and-black cow-print chaps finished in red.

Her outfit gives you two very different textures on one page: smooth, flowing hair and bold, patchy cow print. Keep the red hair rich and warm, and the cow print high-contrast, so her gear really pops. She is the perfect counterpoint to Buzz, where his accents are precise and technical, hers are loose and playful.

These pages are a great fit for fans who want a warm, high-energy character, and they sit naturally beside Woody and Bullseye in the Woody’s Roundup scenes.

Coloring Jessie pages: Build the red hair from light to deep, keep the cow-print chaps crisp black-on-white, and add the red hat and accents last so they stand out.

Rex Coloring Pages

Rex is the lovable, anxious Tyrannosaurus, and his pages are a friendly favorite for younger colorists. He is a tall green plastic dinosaur with tiny arms, a big toothy mouth, and a worried, gentle look that never quite manages to seem scary.

His palette is one of the simplest in the set, which makes him a calm place to color. A single fresh green covers most of him, so this page is good for practicing smooth, even shading across one large shape, with a slightly deeper green along the back and tail to give him a little roundness.

These pages are ideal for beginners and for anyone who likes a sweet, simple character, and they add a bright splash of green to any group scene.

Coloring Rex pages: Use one fresh green for the body, add a deeper green along the back and tail for shape, and keep his expression soft so he stays the gentle dino fans love.

Mr. Potato Head Coloring Pages

Mr. Potato Head is the grumpy, funny classic toy, and his pages are some of the most playful in the collection. He is a brown potato-shaped body covered in detachable parts: eyes, ears, a mustache, a hat, shoes, and his swappable happy or angry features.

What makes him fun to color is exactly what makes him fun to play with, all those separate, removable pieces. The brown body stays simple, but every add-on can be a different color, so one page becomes a little mix-and-match exercise. Some sheets show his parts rearranged or scattered, which only adds to the comedy.

These pages suit colorists who enjoy lots of small, distinct sections and a character with a strong sense of humor.

Coloring Mr. Potato Head pages: Keep the body a warm brown, then color each part, hat, eyes, mustache, and shoes, in its own bright tone so every piece reads clearly.

Bo Peep and Friends Coloring Pages

Bo Peep brings a softer, more delicate look to the toy box. As a porcelain shepherdess figurine, she has a pastel gown, a bonnet, and her signature crook, and in her later look, a flowing cape and a more adventurous pose. Her smooth porcelain surface is a lovely contrast to Buzz’s hard plastic and Woody’s soft cloth, and fans of her character have a dedicated Bo Peep coloring page set as well.

Her gentle palette makes her a calm, rewarding page: keep the gown in soft pastels with clean highlights so the porcelain look stays smooth and bright. This part of the collection also brings in the cuddly side of the toy box, including the strawberry-scented villain Lotso, who has his own Lotso Bear coloring pages collection for fans who like a pink, plush character to color.

Coloring Bo Peep pages: Use soft pastels for the gown, keep the highlights clean so the porcelain looks smooth, and let her crook and bonnet finish the shepherdess look.

Toy Box and Group Coloring Pages

Group pages bring the whole toy box together, and scenes such as Woody with Buzz, the Woody’s Roundup trio, or the toys piled into a car are some of the most rewarding designs. This part of the collection also includes Hamm the piggy bank, Slinky Dog, the three-eyed Aliens, and Sarge and the Green Army Men.

The challenge is keeping a crowded shelf of very different toys clearly apart while the scene still feels like one group. Give each toy its signature color first, Woody’s plaid, Buzz’s white-and-green, Jessie’s red, Rex’s green, then tie everything together with one shared background, such as Andy’s room or a wooden toy box. Fans of this big ensemble cast will find more of the same warm, character-packed worlds across the wider Disney coloring pages collection.

These pages are perfect for toy-box display posters, fan-folder covers, and pieces that show off the whole gang.

Coloring group pages: Color each toy in its own signature palette first, then add one shared background tone so the toy box reads as a single scene instead of separate figures.

Cute and Chibi Coloring Pages

The cute and chibi pages, including rounded baby-style versions of Woody, Buzz, and the Aliens, are the easiest designs for younger fans or short sessions. They simplify each toy into a bigger head and softer shapes, so the signature colors still read clearly with far less detail.

Use slightly brighter versions of each palette and keep backgrounds simple. The three-eyed Aliens are especially satisfying here: their single mint-green color and big eyes make them quick to finish, which is exactly what a young child needs for an early win. These pages also make great mini cards, stickers, and party favors. For even simpler shapes to start with, the coloring pages for kids section has plenty of beginner-friendly options.

This group is the most beginner-friendly part of the collection and a gentle first step into the cast for very young colorists.

Coloring cute and chibi pages: Use larger color blocks, big shiny eyes, and soft shapes, keeping each toy’s signature color so a chibi Buzz still reads as Buzz.

Printable PDF and Online Toy Story Coloring Pages

This collection is easy to use for character coloring, texture practice, and party crafts. Download the PDF when you want a clean paper page for a craft or display; use online coloring when you want to test Buzz’s green-and-purple armor or Woody’s plaid before committing to paper.

For the cleanest print, use full page size on standard paper so the fine details, such as Buzz’s armor panels and Woody’s plaid checks, stay crisp. You can browse the rest of the printable coloring pages library the same way.

Because the collection includes single portraits, busy group scenes, detailed action poses, and simple chibi designs, users can choose a page that fits both skill level and age.

Using printable and online pages: Print for party favors and display projects; color online first to test the busier palettes, like Buzz’s armor or Jessie’s cow print, before choosing a final look.

What These Pages Do

Toy Story is, at its heart, a story about toys and play, so it is fitting that coloring these pages doubles as a small developmental activity. Choosing colors for all of Mr. Potato Head’s separate parts, staying inside the lines of a busy Buzz, and planning a crowded toy-box scene all ask for the kind of focus and hand control that schoolwork relies on.

That link runs deeper than it looks. The American Academy of Pediatrics, in its clinical report The Power of Play (Yogman et al., 2018), describes “object play,” the way children explore an object and learn about its properties, as a building block for language, focus, and executive function, and notes that traditional, hands-on toys tend to support these skills better than screen-based ones. A Toy Story coloring page is a nice extension of that idea: the child is handling the very kinds of classic toys, a cowboy, a dinosaur, a spring dog, that the report has in mind, just in a paper-and-pencil form.

There is a calmer side, too, and here the connection to Woody is almost literal. In a study in Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, Can Coloring Mandalas Reduce Anxiety? (Curry & Kasser, 2005), People who colored a structured design for twenty minutes ended up less anxious than people given a blank page, and, notably, a plaid pattern worked just as well as a mandala. Woody’s plaid shirt is exactly that structured, repeating pattern, which makes his pages a genuinely soothing place to slow down and focus. These pages are not a replacement for support or therapy, but a familiar toy with clear outlines gives a colorist an easy, low-pressure place to settle.

What makes this set genuinely different from most coloring themes is the range of toy materials. Because each character is a different type of object, plush, plastic, metal, ceramic, porcelain, a colorist naturally starts making decisions about surfaces, a kind of visual problem-solving that a single-texture subject never asks for.

Small details such as Buzz’s armor panels, Woody’s plaid and stitching, the Aliens’ three eyes, and the mix of toys across a group page give children plenty of room to practice patience, pencil control, and color planning.

How to Color Toy Story Coloring Pages

Each character section above gives you a palette to aim for. Here is the order that keeps a page clean once you start, whether it is a single portrait or a busy toy-box scene.

Start with the biggest toy or the main character, because it sets the scale. On a group page, block in the largest figure first, often Woody or Buzz, so everything else has something to balance against.

Block in the big shapes before the small ones. Lay out the large areas, shirts, armor, and the dinosaur body before touching fine details. This keeps the page even and gives you room to build contrast.

Give each toy its signature color as an anchor – Plaid for Woody, white-and-green for Buzz, red for Jessie, and green for Rex. Locking these in early makes a crowded toy-box page far easier to read.

Save the fine lines for last. Color the plaid checks, armor buttons, cow-print patches, and tiny eyes once the base colors are settled, so small marks sit cleanly on top.

For group pages, pick one background tone. A single shared background, Andy’s bedroom wall, a wooden floor, or an open toy box, ties the whole shelf together while the separate palettes keep each toy distinct.

Finish with a label or caption. Add a short original caption, such as “To Infinity” or a character’s name. This works well for portraits, group scenes, and fan-folder displays.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Toy Story Coloring Pages

Toy Box Display Poster

Print single-character pages for as many toys as you like and color each in its signature palette, keeping the backgrounds consistent.

Line the finished portraits up on a poster board with a name under each, like a snapshot of the whole toy box on one wall.

Character Bookmark Set

Print chibi or simple portrait pages and color the toys carefully, then cut each into a bookmark shape.

Make one bookmark per character so the set covers the main gang, and add a small name label to each.

Birthday Party Favor Pack

Print chibi pages and simple portraits, color them in bright tones, and cut them out.

Slip one into each party bag, or set out a stack of uncolored pages with crayons as a ready-made activity table for a Toy Story birthday.

Friendship Card Set

Print two-character pages, especially Woody and Buzz, and color them with a balanced palette.

Turn each into a small card with a short, original, friendly caption, and give them to friends, classmates, or family.

Pixar Fan Folder Cover

Print a clean group page or a favorite character portrait and color it with a balanced palette.

Glue the finished page onto a folder, add a label such as “Toy Story” or “Pixar Coloring,” and use it to store your other finished pages.

FAQ About Toy Story Coloring Pages

Are these Toy Story coloring pages free to print? Yes. Every Toy Story page is free to download and print as a PDF, so you can run off a fresh copy whenever you want one.

Can I color Toy Story pages online? Yes. The online option is useful for testing the busier palettes, like Buzz’s green-and-purple armor or Jessie’s cow print, before you print.

Which characters are included? The collection includes Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Jessie, Rex, Hamm, Slinky Dog, Mr. Potato Head, Bo Peep, the three-eyed Aliens, and Sarge and the Green Army Men, plus group scenes and cute or chibi versions.

What format should I use for printing? Print from the PDF. It keeps the page stable on paper, so Buzz’s armor panels and Woody’s plaid come out sharp.

What colors should I use for Woody and Buzz? Give Woody a yellow shirt with a red plaid pattern, a cowhide vest, and blue jeans. Give Buzz a white suit with bright green panels and purple accents, and keep his helmet dome clear.

What color is Rex? Rex is a green dinosaur. A single fresh green covers most of his body, with a slightly deeper green along the back and tail for shape, which makes him one of the easiest characters to color.

Are these pages good for younger children? Yes. The chibi versions and simple single-character portraits suit younger fans, with larger shapes and fewer details. Rex and the three-eyed Aliens are especially easy first pages because of their simple, single colors.

Can teachers use Toy Story coloring pages in class? Yes. Simple character designs suit art breaks, color lessons, fine motor practice, and friendship or teamwork activities, and the toy-box group scenes are a natural fit for a lesson on working together.

What crafts can I make with Toy Story coloring pages? You can make a toy-box display poster, character bookmark sets, birthday party favor packs, friendship card sets, or Pixar fan folder covers.

More Disney and Pixar Coloring Pages

Browse the full collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com. All 100+ pages are free, available as printable PDF pages, ready to print from PDF or color online.

These Toy Story pages are created for personal, classroom, character, and fan-art coloring use. They fit many moments: toy-box posters, character bookmarks, party favors, friendship cards, fan folder covers, classroom art breaks, rainy-day coloring, and screen-free creative time.

For the final pass, make the page feel balanced. Give each toy its signature color, leave clean highlights on the shiny plastic toys, and tie group scenes together with one shared background.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We especially want to see your Toy Box Display Poster, Character Bookmark Set, and Friendship Card Set.

These related coloring collections will help you explore more of Toy Story’s characters and the wider world of Pixar:

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.