Toys and Dolls Coloring Pages
Toys and Dolls Coloring Pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com brings together over 2,160 pages across 42 sub-categories – the full world of play objects that children love, collect, and carry everywhere. This is one of the most varied categories on the site. You’ll find classic fashion dolls side by side with limited-edition designer art toys, Japanese wooden kokeshi next to the Plushie Claw Machine, and old-school Rubik’s Cube pages next to the newest viral collectibles.
Every page is completely free to download as a PDF and print, or color online in your browser.
Fashion Dolls
This is the oldest and most searched cluster in the category. Barbie is the undisputed centerpiece – coloring pages based on Mattel’s fashion doll span her 65+ year history of outfits, settings, and character variations. Barbie Horse extends into Barbie’s equestrian world, which has its own dedicated fan base.
Bratz covers the rival doll line with the oversized eyes and fashion-forward aesthetic that made it Barbie’s biggest competition in the 2000s. Monster High covers the Mattel monster-themed fashion doll universe – the daughters of Dracula, Frankenstein, and the Mummy in their private school setting. Rainbow High covers the newer fashion doll series with its rainbow-coded character palette, where each doll’s entire look is built around a single color.
Betty Spaghetty covers the 1990s bendable plastic doll with the exaggerated spaghetti-thin limbs. Paper Doll covers the cut-out doll tradition – not a brand, but the format that predates modern plastic dolls by centuries, where you color the doll and then color-separate outfits to fit her.
The LOL Surprise Universe
The LOL Surprise brand by MGA Entertainment has three dedicated sub-categories that reflect how deeply the franchise has expanded. Lol Surprise Doll covers the main blind-bag collectible doll series – the tiny ball packaging, the layered unboxing reveal, and the small, round-headed characters with their oversized eyes and fashion accessories.
LOL OMG covers the larger, more fashion-forward sister line of the LOL universe – bigger dolls with more elaborate outfits, closer to fashion doll territory than the original bite-sized collectibles. LOL Pets covers the animals that come packaged with LOL dolls. Lol Baby covers the smallest characters in the range.
Collectibles, Plushies, and Designer Toys
This is the fastest-growing cluster in the Toys and Dolls category, driven by the global boom in collectible toy culture.
Labubu covers the pointed-eared, jagged-toothed monster character created by artist Kasing Lung and produced by Pop Mart – the same character that became a global phenomenon in 2024 when celebrity photos of Labubu bag charms went viral. Labubu pages are among the most searched on the entire site right now. KAWS covers the American artist’s COMPANION figure – the XX-eyed character that straddles the line between fine art and toy. LalaFanfan Duck covers the Korean dressed rubber duck collectible that took over social media in the early 2020s.
Squishmallow covers the marshmallow-textured plush toys that became a pandemic-era collecting phenomenon – their soft, rounded, pillow-like forms and simple face designs make them particularly satisfying to color. Hatchimals covers the Spin Master toy that hatches from an egg, with its round egg shape and the creature revealed inside. Zoobles cover the small sphere-shaped animal figures that open up. Beanie Boos covers TY’s wide-eyed plush animals with their oversized glittery eyes.
Tsum Tsum covers Disney’s cylindrical stackable plush figures – the rounded, short, log-shaped versions of beloved Disney characters. Na Na Na Surprise covers the MGA surprise doll and panda plush hybrid series.
Cultural Craft Dolls
Kokeshi Doll is one of the most distinctly illustrated sub-categories in the entire collection. These are traditional Japanese wooden dolls from the Tōhoku region – cylindrical body, spherical head, no arms or legs, decorated with painted floral and geometric patterns. The patterns vary by regional tradition, and coloring a kokeshi page is genuinely an introduction to Japanese folk craft.
Precious Moments covers the teardrop-eyed porcelain figurine series that has been a staple of gift and collectible stores since the 1970s. The coloring pages capture the soft, gentle aesthetic of the original figurines. Patchwork Animal covers stuffed animals made from fabric patches – the visual variety of different fabric colors and patterns across a single animal form.
Classic Toys
Teddy Bear covers the stuffed bear in all its forms – from the simple brown bear to the elaborate plush versions dressed in costumes. The teddy bear is one of the oldest and most universally recognized toy forms, and the coloring pages range from simple outlines for very young children to detailed fur-texture compositions.
Rubik’s Cube covers the classic 3×3 color puzzle – one of the most immediately recognizable toys in the world, and a coloring page that has a built-in rule: each face of the cube uses only one of the six colors (white, yellow, red, orange, blue, green). Pop It covers the silicone sensory toy that became a global fidget trend. Mr. Potato Head covers the classic Hasbro vegetable figure with its detachable facial features.
Pinwheel and Whirligig cover the wind-powered spinning toys – the colorful paper or plastic pinwheel on a stick. Both are excellent coloring subjects because the spokes or petals naturally divide the image into sections that reward a repeating or alternating color pattern. Balloon and Beach Ball cover the inflatable play objects that are both defined almost entirely by their color choices.
Toy Sets and Playsets
Shopkins and Bubbleisha cover the MooseZone collectible grocery characters – anthropomorphized food and household items with cute faces, each with their own name and character. Calico Critters (Sylvanian Families in Europe and Japan) covers the dressed animal family sets – the rabbit family, the bear family, the hedgehog family – in their detailed miniature domestic settings. These are among the most detailed coloring pages in the category, because Calico Critters’ aesthetic involves very fine clothing and interior design detail.
Lisa Frank covers the iconic 1980s–1990s stationery and school supply brand known for its hyper-saturated, rainbow-colored animal illustrations. A Lisa Frank coloring page is an invitation to use every color you own, as loudly as possible – that is exactly the point.
Giftland covers the gift and present aesthetic – wrapped boxes, bows, ribbons, and the visual world of giving. Plushie Claw Machine covers the arcade claw machine stacked with plush prizes – a subject that combines the toy aesthetic with the gaming-adjacent visual world that has a strong presence in contemporary kids’ culture. Enchanted Music Box covers the wind-up music box with its spinning figurine, linking toy culture to the fantasy and whimsy tradition.
Brick and Vehicle Toys
Lego covers the Danish brick toy system that has been the world’s most popular construction toy for decades – minifigures, brick-built scenes, and the blocky, pixelated visual aesthetic that has become immediately recognizable to anyone who has stepped barefoot on a Lego brick. Ninjago extends the Lego universe into the specific animated series about ninja warriors, which is one of Lego’s most successful original intellectual properties.
Hot Wheels covers the Mattel die-cast miniature car line – vivid paint jobs, exaggerated proportions, flame graphics, and the compact racing-car aesthetic of the world’s best-selling toy vehicle brand. Toys links to the general Toys sub-category covering basic toy illustrations without brand affiliation.
