Free Treasure Planet Coloring Pages: 30+ printable PDF pages featuring Jim Hawkins, cyborg pirate John Silver, shapeshifting Morph, robot B.E.N., and the sailing ships of deep space. The film’s mix of Victorian sailing and outer space makes the color choices here different from almost any other Disney set. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.

Everything wooden and human in this film runs warm: Jim’s clothes, the ship’s deck, the pirates around him, all earthy browns, bronzes, and muted blues. Everything mechanical and cosmic runs cool: the black and deep blue of space, cold silver machinery, the glow of a robot eye. John Silver bridges both worlds literally, warm human flesh on his left side, cool robot metal on his right, and getting that split right is the set’s best coloring challenge.

Most pages center on Jim, in solo action poses or with Silver and the supporting cast. The ship exterior pages and space scenes give you a chance to work with starfield backgrounds, which need their own approach. Morph is a fun break from the detailed character pages, and the B.E.N. pages reward a careful gold-and-chrome treatment.

These pages suit fans of the film and anyone who enjoys the visual mashup of old-world sailing and science fiction. They are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Walt Disney Pictures or any rights holder of Treasure Planet.

Quick Answer

Treasure Planet coloring pages are a free set of 30+ printable PDFs and online sheets featuring Jim Hawkins, John Silver, Morph, B.E.N., Dr. Doppler, and the ships and space scenes of the film. The set’s defining coloring challenge is managing the film’s two visual worlds: warm Victorian earth tones for the sailing elements, cool dark blues and metallic greys for the space and machine elements.

Best for: Treasure Planet fans, older children and teens, Disney adventure fans, and anyone who enjoys the steampunk sci-fi aesthetic

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring

Popular pages: Cyborg Silver, Jim Hawkins, John Silver, Jim on Solar Surf, Ship from Treasure Planet

Creative uses: fan art, Silver split-palette study, Jim solar surfing action piece, ship and space scene display, B.E.N. gold robot portrait

What’s Inside Treasure Planet Coloring Pages

Jim Hawkins Pages

Jim appears across the largest share of the set, in solo portraits, jumping, climbing into a boat, holding the holographic map, surfing on his solar surfer, and in group scenes with Silver, Morph, B.E.N., Dr. Doppler, and his mother.

Coloring Jim: his look is deliberately designed as a teenager who doesn’t quite fit in anywhere, which shows up in his mix of old-world and slightly futuristic clothing. His base outfit runs in muted blues and off-whites, a loose shirt and practical pants rather than anything flashy. His hair is a warm medium brown. His skin is warm and slightly sun-bronzed from a life spent outdoors and on rooftops. On the solar surf pages, his surfboard has a warm copper-orange glow at its base that makes a nice accent against the blue-black of the space background.

John Silver Pages

Silver appears in solo pages labeled Cyborg Silver, Captain Silver, and Captain John Silver, and in several duo compositions with Jim.

Coloring Silver: This is the most technically interesting challenge in the set. His left side is a warm, weathered human, with a dark reddish-brown pirate coat, warm tanned skin, and the warm brass and bronze of his human-side mechanical additions. His right side is entirely mechanical: cool silver metal, a glowing red cybernetic eye, and the harder, colder tones of a robot arm and leg. The dividing line between these two sides is where the film’s whole visual theme lives in miniature. Keep the human side genuinely warm and the robot side genuinely cool, and resist any temptation to blend the two palettes into a single middle-ground tone.

Morph Pages

Morph appears in a solo page and alongside Jim.

Coloring Morph: he is a small, blobby creature that can reshape himself into anything, and his default coloring is a warm, slightly translucent pink. Think of him as a friendly version of a living water balloon, soft and slightly luminous. Because he appears at multiple scales across his pages, consistent warm pink is enough to make him recognizable without any additional detail.

B.E.N. Pages

B.E.N., the robot, appears on two pages alongside Jim.

Coloring B.E.N.: his design is all warm gold and slightly worn chrome, a robot who has been alone on a planet for a very long time and shows it. His large, round head, the dome covering his brain, and his jointed body all work in a warm, brushed-gold tone with cooler Silver metallic accents on his moving parts. He should look friendly and slightly eccentric rather than polished and new.

Dr. Doppler and Group Pages

Dr. Delbert Doppler appears in several group compositions with Jim, Silver, and Mr. Arrow.

Coloring Dr. Doppler: he’s a dog-like alien academic in practical adventure clothing, warm browns and tans that suit a scientist who is slightly out of his depth on a pirate ship. He provides a useful, warm, naturalistic note in any group page he appears on, grounding the more dramatic palettes of Silver and Jim around him.

Ship, Space, and Pirate Pages

Four pages cover the sailing ships of space, including intact ship views and a dramatic wrecked ship scene. One page shows the ship’s pirate crew.

Coloring the ship and space pages: the ships are wooden-hulled sailing vessels from the Age of Sail, rendered in warm browns and tans with brass and copper fittings, all set against the deep blue-black of open space. The contrast between warm wood and cold starfield is the film’s core visual idea, and it’s worth committing to on these pages: make the wood genuinely warm and the space genuinely dark. For the wrecked ship page, letting the wooden tones get slightly grayer and more faded suggests damage and age in a way that keeps the drama of the scene.

Printable PDF and Online Treasure Planet Coloring Pages

Every page is available as a printable PDF or an online coloring sheet.

Using both formats: the PDF works especially well for the ship and space pages, where dark backgrounds benefit from the control of real paper and markers or colored pencils. The online version is handy for the simpler character portrait pages. Both keep the film’s detailed linework clear.

What These Pages Do

Treasure Planet works by putting two visual worlds that should clash, Age of Sail wooden ships and outer space science fiction, in the same frame and committing fully to both rather than softening either one. The warm, earthy tones of a sailing ship deck and the cold, dark blues of open space shouldn’t belong together, and the film insists they do. John Silver makes the same argument in his own design: warm human and cool machine, divided down the middle and asked to function as one character. Getting the most out of this set means leaning into that tension rather than blending it away. The wood should look warm. The space should look cold. Silver’s human side and robot side should feel like they come from different visual worlds, because they do. 

Treasure Planet was underappreciated when it came out in 2002, but has grown a genuinely devoted following since, especially among fans who discovered it later and appreciated just how ambitious its visual blend was. Coloring pages from a film like this reward patience, since there is more going on in any given scene than in a simpler Disney adventure. Older children and teens in particular tend to connect with Jim Hawkins as a character, and the solar surfing pages capture some of the film’s most exciting imagery.

The American Art Therapy Association recognizes that adventure imagery combining warm historical materials with vast cool settings offers a visually rich and absorbing coloring experience. Treasure Planet’s contrast between wooden ship warmth and deep-space coolness gives this set a range few Disney collections match.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recognizes that coming-of-age stories where a young person finds their identity through challenge and mentorship are particularly resonant for older children and teens. Jim Hawkins’s arc from directionless teenager to someone who discovers what he’s capable of carries genuine emotional value.

How to Color Treasure Planet Coloring Pages

Tips that work across the full set.

Decide on your warm and cool anchors before you start any page. Treasure Planet’s visual logic runs on that tension between warm earth tones and cool space tones. Picking a specific warm brown for wood and a specific dark blue for space early, and keeping both consistent, is what makes the set feel cohesive rather than scattered.

On Silver’s pages, commit to the split. His human left side stays in the warm reddish-brown pirate coat palette. His robot’s right side stays in cool silver metal. The more clearly you hold that division, the more clearly you capture what makes him an interesting character design.

Solar surfing pages benefit from a dark background. Jim’s warm coloring reads better against a deep blue-black space background than against white paper. If you are working on the printed PDF, consider laying down a dark blue background wash first before adding Jim’s warmer tones on top.

Morph can be done quickly with a single warm pink. He doesn’t need complexity or shading. A clean, consistent warm pink across his whole shape is exactly right and gives you a fast, satisfying page when you want a break from Silver’s detailed split palette.

For the ship pages, let the warmth build across the wooden surfaces. Multiple layers of warm brown with slightly different undertones suggest the aged, real wood of a long-sailed vessel better than a single flat fill.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Treasure Planet Coloring Pages

Silver’s Two Worlds Display Card

Color a John Silver solo page, keeping his left side firmly in warm pirate coat browns and his right side firmly in cool silver metal.

Cut the finished page in half vertically and mount each half on a separate backing card in its corresponding palette, warm card for the human half and cool grey card for the robot half, to show the two visual worlds of the film side by side. Takes about twenty-five minutes.

Jim Solar Surf Action Piece

Color the Jim on the Solar Surf page with a deep blue-black space background, then cut Jim and his surfboard out along their outlines.

Attach the cutout to a piece of dark card using a small folded paper tab so Jim appears to float slightly above the surface. Takes about twenty minutes.

Morph Shape Collection

Color all Morph pages, then cut out Morph in each of his different positions and arrangements.

Glue all the Morph cutouts onto a single backing sheet in a scattered arrangement to show his ability to appear in multiple places and forms at once. Takes about fifteen minutes.

Ship and Space Contrast Page

Color one of the ship exterior pages, giving the wooden hull a full warm brown treatment, then fill any open space background areas with a deep blue-black using marker or dark pencil.

The contrast between the warm ship and the cold space captures the film’s core visual idea in one page. Tape the finished page onto a dark card border to frame it as a display piece. Takes about twenty minutes.

Crew Portrait Strip

Color small portraits of Jim, Silver, Morph, and B.E.N. on separate cards, keeping each character’s palette consistent.

Tape all four in a row on a long backing strip to create a quick crew portrait showing the Benbows’ adventuring team. Takes about twenty-five minutes.

FAQ About Treasure Planet Coloring Pages

Are these Treasure Planet coloring pages free, and can I color them online?

Yes, completely free. Download the PDF and print at home, or color directly on the website without printing.

Does the set include the ship and space scenes, or mainly character portraits?

Both. The majority of pages are character portraits and duo compositions. Still, several pages show the sailing ships against space backgrounds, including a wrecked ship scene and a view of the ship underway. These provide a good change of pace from the character pages and capture some of the film’s most distinctive imagery.

What is Treasure Planet?

Treasure Planet is a 2002 Disney animated film that retells Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island in a sci-fi universe where sailing ships travel through outer space. It follows Jim Hawkins, a troubled teenager who discovers a map to the legendary Treasure Planet and joins a crew of space pirates and explorers. The film is known for its ambitious visual blend of Victorian-era sailing design and science fiction aesthetics. You can read more on Wikipedia.

Why does John Silver look like two different characters on the same page?

Because he is, in a sense, Silver is a cyborg: his left side is human, with a warm-toned pirate coat, tanned skin, and human features, while his entire right side is mechanical, with a silver robot arm and leg and a glowing cybernetic eye. The film uses this split deliberately to represent a character caught between the warmth of his connection with Jim and the cold calculation of his pirate ambitions.

What colors should I use for Jim Hawkins?

Muted blue and off-white clothing that mixes old-world sailing style with slightly futuristic elements. Warm medium brown hair and warm bronzed skin. On solar surf pages, his surfboard has a warm copper-orange glow at its base that contrasts well against the dark space background.

What colors should I use for Morph?

A warm, slightly translucent pink throughout, consistent across all his pages, regardless of what shape he takes. He is soft and friendly-looking, and a clean, warm pink is all that is needed to make him immediately recognizable.

Are these official Treasure Planet coloring pages?

No. These are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use only, not affiliated with or endorsed by Walt Disney Pictures or any rights holder of Treasure Planet.

Who is B.E.N., and what colors does he use?

B.E.N. stands for Bio Electronic Navigator, a friendly robot who has been stranded alone on a planet for a very long time before Jim finds him. His coloring is warm, brushed gold with cooler Silver metallic accents on his joints and moving parts, and his large dome head should look slightly worn and eccentric rather than polished and new.

More Disney Adventure Coloring Pages

Browse everything at ColoringPagesOnly.com and open any page to print or color online.

These pages are for personal fan use only and are not official Treasure Planet products.

The two most important decisions in this set: keep the warm tones genuinely warm and the cool tones genuinely cool, and hold Silver’s human-robot split clearly rather than blending it. Everything else follows from those two habits.

Tag your work with #ColoringPagesOnly on Facebook and Pinterest. We’d love to see your Silver split cards, solar surf action pieces, and ship and space contrast pages.

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.