Gabby’s Dollhouse Coloring Pages bring the brightest, most cat-filled corner of Netflix’s preschool lineup straight to your coloring table – and this is one of the collections I love most at ColoringPagesOnly.com. With 50+ free pages covering Gabby, Pandy Paws, Cakey Cat, MerCat, DJ Catnip, Kitty Fairy, Pillow Cat, Baby Box, Catrat, Carlita, and the full Dollhouse crew, there’s a page here for every little fan who has ever wanted to step inside that magical pink box.
Every page is completely free – download as PDF to print or color online in your browser. No sign-up, no cost.
What Is Gabby’s Dollhouse?
Gabby’s Dollhouse is a Netflix original series that launched in 2021 and quickly became one of the most beloved preschool shows on the platform. It has a genuinely unique format that children find irresistible: it blends live-action and animation in the same frame. Gabby herself is a real girl – played by Laila Lockhart Kraner – who puts on her magical cat ears and shrinks down to enter her animated dollhouse, where all the rooms come alive, and every cat character is waiting to play.
Each episode follows a simple, satisfying structure: Gabby finds a delivery box at her door, opens a surprise cat box, discovers what’s inside, and then explores a different room of the Dollhouse with her cat friends. The rooms are themed around activities and interests – a craft room, a music room, a garden, a kitchen – and each episode incorporates a simple creative or hands-on activity that children can try at home. The whole thing is warm, inclusive, and genuinely fun for the preschool age range it’s aimed at.
The show also stars Gabby’s real cat, Carlita, who appears in the live-action segments and adds to the sense that the Dollhouse is a real place just behind the screen that children could step into.
Meet the Gabby’s Dollhouse Characters
Gabby is the heart of the show – a bright, cheerful girl with dark hair, cat ears, and an outfit that always matches the Dollhouse’s pink-and-pastel energy. Her color palette is pinks and purples with yellow accents – warm, inviting, and immediately recognizable. The many Gabby portrait pages in the collection range from simple single-character outlines perfect for younger children to more detailed compositions with her cat friends.
Pandy Paws is Gabby’s best friend and the character most frequently requested alongside her – a black-and-white panda cat with round ears, a soft, round face, and the personality of the most enthusiastic playmate imaginable. His pages are among the most graphically satisfying in the collection to color precisely because of the high-contrast black and white, with the small pink details on his cheeks and inner ears creating little pops of warmth in an otherwise monochrome character. The Pandy Paws and Gabby pages – of which there are several – are consistently the most popular in the whole collection.
Cakey Cat is the Dollhouse’s resident baker – a pastel pink cat with frosting-white accents, sprinkle details, and the general aesthetic of a celebration cake brought to life. She lives in the Baking Studio room and is endlessly enthusiastic about desserts. Her pages are an invitation to go full soft-pink-and-candy-color, layering cream, blush, and pastel mint in the way you’d decorate an actual birthday cake. The Cute Cakey, Adorable Cakey, and the two Cakey Cat pages each capture a different mood of this reliably cheerful character.
MerCat lives in the Underwater Room of the Dollhouse – a teal and aqua mermaid cat with flowing fins instead of a tail and the wide-eyed wonder of someone who has never quite gotten over how beautiful the ocean is. Her pages are among the most visually complex in the collection, with the layered blues and greens of underwater light and the detail of her fin patterns. The Pretty MerCat and MerCat pages are ideal for children who love the ocean as much as they love cats.
DJ Catnip runs the Music Room – a blue-green cat with headphones, a turntable, and the energy of someone who genuinely believes every moment is better with the right soundtrack. The “Daniel James DJ Catnip” page captures his full DJ persona; the DJ Catnip portrait page and the DJ Catnip and Pandy Paws page are more casual character studies. His pages work beautifully in bright, electric blues and teals, with the headphones as a natural focal point in a contrasting color.
Kitty Fairy lives in the Garden Room and has the aesthetic of her name made literal: she’s a lavender-and-pale-pink fairy cat with delicate wings, a flower crown, and the gentle, quiet energy that makes her one of the most soothing characters in the show for very young children. Her wings are the most interesting coloring element – translucent fairy wings that reward watercolor pencils or light-touch markers better than heavy crayon.
Pillow Cat is the Dollhouse’s sleepiest resident – a soft, round, pastel-toned cat whose entire visual identity is built around comfort and coziness. The Pillow Cat Sleeping page is one of the most peaceful in the whole collection – the kind of page you color quietly while half-watching the show in the background. Her palette runs in very soft cream, pale lavender, and warm beige.
Baby Box is the tiny surprise that appears when Gabby opens a surprise cat box – a small, round, wide-eyed kitten whose primary visual language is “impossibly cute.” The Happy Baby Box, Cute Baby Box, Pretty Baby Box, and Lovely Baby Box pages each show different expressions and poses of this permanently delighted little character. These are among the simplest pages in the collection and among the most popular with very young colorists.
Catrat is one of the Dollhouse’s more unusual residents – a gray cat-rat hybrid with round ears and a long tail, who lives in the kitchen and whose entire personality is built around enthusiasm for food. His pages capture his distinctive gray-and-cream color palette.
Carlita is Gabby’s real cat – the actual live-action cat who appears in the show’s non-animated segments. Her pages translate the warm tabbiness of a real domestic cat into the show’s illustration style, making them some of the more naturalistic pages in a collection that is otherwise very stylized.
Unicorn Cakey Cat is the magical crossover between Cakey Cat and a unicorn – a pink cat with a rainbow horn and a color palette that takes Cakey Cat’s pastel sweetness and pushes it all the way into full rainbow territory. This page is consistently one of the most requested in the collection for birthday party activities.
What’s Inside Gabby’s Dollhouse Coloring Collection
The Gabby and Pandy Paws pages form the core of the collection – there are at least eight pages showing the two of them together in different compositions, from simple portrait pairs to fuller scenes. These are the pages families reach for first, and they cover the full range from very simple outlines for toddlers to more detailed illustrations for slightly older preschoolers.
The individual character portrait pages give each Dollhouse cat their own dedicated spotlight – the various Cakey Cat pages, the MerCat pages, the Kitty Fairy pages, the Pillow Cat pages, the Baby Box pages – and these are the ones that work best when you’re spending focused time on one character and want to get their colors exactly right.
The group and ensemble pages – Gabby with Friends, Gabby and Friends, Gabby, Pandy Paws, DJ Catnip and Pillow Cat, DJ Catnip, Baby Box Cat, and MerCat together – are ideal for classroom and birthday party use where children want to color alongside each other and each have a character to focus on within the same scene.
The mandala pages – Pandy Paws Mandalas, Gabby and Pandy Paws Mandalas, and Gabby & Pandy Paws Mandalas – are the most intricate pages in the collection and work best for older children or adults coloring alongside young children. They take the show’s characters and render them in detailed symmetrical patterns that reward patient, careful coloring.
The logo and scene pages – Logo Gabby’s Dollhouse, Gabby’s Dollhouse Logo with Cats, Printable Gabby’s Dollhouse, Gabby’s Dollhouse – are the pages that work best as display items after coloring, since they capture the full visual identity of the show rather than focusing on a single character.
Coloring Tips for Gabby’s Dollhouse Pages
Gabby’s Dollhouse has one of the most consistent and deliberate color palettes in preschool animation – it’s built almost entirely on pastels and warm brights, with very little that is dark or muted. Understanding this palette is the single most useful thing you can do before starting any of these pages.
The show’s signature palette runs through soft pinks, lilacs, mint greens, warm yellows, creamy whites, and sky blues. Almost nothing in the Dollhouse is deeply saturated or heavily shadowed – it’s all light, warm, and inviting. When in doubt on any page, ask: Does this color feel like something from a pastel birthday cake? If yes, you’re on the right track.
For Gabby herself, her outfit and hair accessories should follow the show’s pink-and-purple-with-yellow-accents color scheme. Her dark hair is one of the show’s deliberate choices – warm dark brown rather than black, which keeps her in the warm register of the show’s overall palette even in her darker tones.
For Pandy Paws, the temptation is to use pure black for his darker fur areas. Resist it slightly – a very dark blue-gray or charcoal reads as more alive than pure black, and it harmonizes better with the rest of the show’s soft palette. His white areas should be kept very clean and bright, and the small pink blush circles on his cheeks are tiny but important – they’re the detail that makes him look properly like himself.
For Cakey Cat, lean into the dessert palette fully: pale pink base, cream white accents, pastel green for any sprinkle or frosting details, and a warm, soft yellow for the lightest highlights. Think of her as a character you could eat.
For MerCat, the underwater color palette is where this page really opens up. Her body is aqua and teal, with the fins ranging from lighter sky blue at the edges to deeper teal toward the center. The background of any of her pages is an opportunity to work with layered blues – starting with pale sky blue at the top of the page and deepening through aquamarine, teal, and blue-green toward the bottom, creating the feeling of water depth without needing any actual shadow technique.
For the mandala pages, these work best with a planned palette selected before you start. Choose four or five colors that feel like the show – a pink, a purple, a mint, a yellow, and a cream – and assign each to a specific type of shape within the mandala. This gives the finished result a coherent look that feels intentional rather than random.
5 Activities to Do With Your Gabby’s Dollhouse Pages
Build your own Dollhouse room. Color several character pages and cut out the individual characters, then use a cardboard box or a large sheet of background paper to create a Dollhouse room. Tape the colored characters into the scene, draw furniture and decorations, and add a color scheme that matches the character whose room it is – Cakey Cat’s Baking Studio would be all pinks and pastels, MerCat’s Underwater Room would be all blues and greens, and DJ Catnip’s Music Room would be electric blue with yellow accents. This is the activity that most directly extends the world of the show into a physical creative project.
Color a surprise box delivery. Before starting, put all of Gabby’s Dollhouse pages face down in a pile and have your child draw one at random without looking – just like Gabby opening a surprise cat box. Whatever character comes out is the one they color. This small change transforms coloring from a directed activity into a discovery activity, and it captures exactly the spirit of the show’s signature moment.
Make a Dollhouse character matching game. Color two copies of five or six-character pages (printing the same page twice), cut them down to playing-card size, and use them as a memory card matching game. Turn all cards face-down and take turns flipping two at a time – match the pair, and you keep them. The child who remembers where the characters are wins. This works particularly well with the Baby Box and Pandy Paws pages, which appear in multiple versions in the collection.
Create a Gabby’s Dollhouse birthday banner. Print the Logo Gabby’s Dollhouse page and several character portrait pages, color them all in the show’s pastel palette, and cut them out to make a garland or banner for a Gabby’s Dollhouse birthday party. Strung together with yarn through small holes at the corners, the colored pages make a completely personalized decoration that children helped create themselves.
Design a new Dollhouse room. After coloring several existing pages, ask your child: what room hasn’t Gabby visited yet? What would their favorite room in the Dollhouse be? Give them blank paper and the show’s color palette as a reference, and have them draw their own Dollhouse room – its décor, its cat resident, and what kind of activity happens there. The coloring pages from the collection can become the starting point for characters who visit the new room.
Download Your Free Gabby’s Dollhouse Pages Today!
All 50+ Gabby’s Dollhouse Coloring Pages are completely free – download as PDF to print at home or color online in your browser with one click. No sign-up, no cost. Whether you’re printing them for a birthday party, a quiet afternoon at home, a Sunday school craft table, or a preschool classroom art time – we hope these pages bring as much color and warmth to your day as the show itself does.
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