Printable Coloring Pages for Kids
Spring Flowers Coloring Pages
Spring flowers coloring pages for kids to print and color.
I love spring flowers. I live in Canada and the winters are long. Those first pops of color in the spring always put a smile on my face (for me, crocus, snowdrops and species tulips are first up in my garden). I love daffodils, but they don't grow well where I live so I always make sure to get a bouquet of them around the first day of spring to brighten up my kitchen and my mood.
Cherry blossoms are one of spring's most fleeting and breathtaking moments. Clouds of pale pink petals appear for just a week or two before drifting to the ground like snow. In Japan, their arrival is celebrated with picnics beneath the trees, a tradition called hanami, or flower viewing.
Crocuses are among the bravest of spring flowers, pushing up through cold soil and sometimes even snow before winter has properly said goodbye. Their cheerful cups of purple, yellow, and white are often the very first color to appear in a spring garden.
Bright and boldly yellow, daffodils are the unofficial heralds of spring. They grow from bulbs planted in autumn and spend all winter waiting underground, gathering the energy to burst into bloom the moment the days start to lengthen. A field of daffodils in the sun is one of the season's great joys.
Dandelions may be dismissed as weeds, but they are one of spring's most important flowers. They are among the first to bloom each year and are a vital early food source for bees and butterflies. Children have been making wishes on their feathery seed heads for as long as anyone can remember.
Hyacinths fill the spring garden with dense, jewel-colored spikes of bloom and a perfume so sweet it carries on the breeze from several gardens away. Purple, pink, white, and blue, they are as beautiful to look at as they are to smell, and a single bulb can fill an entire room with fragrance.
Irises are among the most elegant flowers of the spring garden, their ruffled petals layered in shades of violet, blue, gold, and white. Named for the Greek goddess of the rainbow, they come in nearly every color imaginable and have been beloved by artists and gardeners for thousands of years.
Lilacs bloom for just a few precious weeks each spring, filling the air with one of the most nostalgic scents in all of nature. Their clusters of tiny purple and white flowers have a way of stopping people in their tracks, and a bouquet of fresh lilacs on the kitchen table is one of the season's simplest pleasures.
Pansies are the friendly faces of the spring garden. Their distinctive markings give each flower a personality all its own. Hardy and cheerful, they bloom in cool weather when most other flowers are still deciding whether to show up, and their velvety petals come in combinations of purple, yellow, white, and deep burgundy.
The pasque flower is one of spring's quiet wonders, blooming in early April across prairies and mountain meadows while the ground is still cold. Its silky purple petals surround a golden center, and after the bloom fades it produces feathery seed heads that catch the light like tiny flames.
Plum blossoms are one of the first signs of spring in East Asia, blooming while snow is still on the ground and celebrated in art and poetry for centuries. Their delicate pink and white flowers appear on bare branches before a single leaf has opened, a reminder that beauty often arrives before we expect it.
Every spring garden begins the same way... with a tiny seed and a little faith. Plant it in warm soil, give it water and sunlight, and watch something remarkable happen. A sprouting seed is one of nature's most quietly magical moments, and one of the best things to show a curious child.
Tulips are the signature flower of spring, arriving in great sweeps of red, yellow, orange, pink, and purple just as the world is waking up again. They grow from bulbs and come back year after year, a reliable promise that no matter how long the winter, spring always follows.

















