
Actividades de colorear de verano para niños: 12 maneras de combatir el aburrimiento
12 actividades para colorear de verano organizadas por temas: playa y océano, naturaleza al aire libre, celebraciones y viajes. Incluye consejos sobre materiales para el calor, actividades educativas y recomendaciones de edad.
It took exactly three days. Three days into summer break and my six-year-old was standing in the kitchen doorway with that look on his face. "Mom, I'm bored." The pool wasn't open yet. The sprinkler had lost its novelty. And screen time was already pushing limits by 10 a.m.
I grabbed a stack of coloring pages from the printer, dumped out the crayon bin, and told him to pick something to color while I figured out lunch. Forty-five minutes later he was still at the table, quiet, working on an ocean scene and asking me whether sharks sleep. That afternoon became the first of many summer coloring sessions, and now I keep a rotating supply of printed pages ready from June through August.
Coloring works for summer because it's flexible. You can do it outside, in the car, on a rainy afternoon, or at a picnic table while the burgers cook. It pairs with almost any summer activity if you get a little creative. Here are 12 summer coloring activities we've tried, organized by theme, so you can pick the ones that fit your family.
Beach and ocean themes
1. Beach scene coloring meets sand art
Print a beach coloring page with shells, sandcastles, and waves. Let your child color everything except the sandy areas. Then brush a thin layer of white glue over the sand sections and sprinkle real sand on top. If you don't live near a beach, craft sand from the dollar store works fine.
The texture makes the page feel more like a project than a worksheet. My kids hung theirs on the fridge for most of July, and every time someone came over they had to explain their "real sand" artwork.
2. Ocean animals deep dive
This one turns coloring into a mini marine biology lesson. Print pages for ocean animals, fish, and dolphins. Before your child starts coloring, look up one fun fact about each animal together. Did you know octopuses have three hearts? Or that dolphins sleep with one eye open?
Write the fact on the back of each page. By the end of the activity, your kid has a little stack of ocean flashcards they colored themselves. We wrote more about pairing coloring with animal learning in our post on animal coloring pages for kids, if you want to expand this one.
3. Underwater world mural
This is a bigger project, perfect for a week when you need a multi-day activity. Print six to eight ocean-themed pages: fish, coral, sea turtles, jellyfish, a whale. Your child colors them over a few days (no rush). Once they're all done, cut out the individual creatures and glue them onto a long piece of butcher paper that you've painted or colored blue.
Tape it to a wall and you've got an underwater mural. Add new creatures throughout the summer as your child colors more pages. By August, the whole wall is covered and your kid can see how much they colored over the summer.
Outdoor and nature activities
4. Backyard campout coloring night
Print nature-themed coloring pages (trees, campfires, stars, owls) and set up a blanket in the backyard after dinner. Bring out the coloring supplies, some flashlights, and maybe s'mores if you're feeling generous. The combination of coloring outside as the sun goes down feels like an event to kids, even though you're just sitting in your own yard.
If you want to build on this, print some bird and frog pages too. Color whatever you can hear. Crickets chirping? There's a page for that. Frog croaking in the distance? Pull out the frog page. It turns a simple evening outside into a sensory activity.
5. Summer bug hunt and color
Similar to a spring bug hunt, but with summer-specific insects. Fireflies, cicadas, dragonflies, grasshoppers. Make a checklist and head outside in the early evening when bugs are most active. Back inside, color a page for every bug you spotted.
The summer version has a twist the spring one doesn't: fireflies. If you've never sat outside with a kid catching fireflies and then come inside to color a picture of one, you're missing out. That combination of running around in the dark followed by quiet coloring at the kitchen table is one of my favorite summer evenings. Print some butterfly pages too, since summer brings different species than spring.
6. Garden journal coloring pages
If you have a garden (even a few pots on a patio), pair it with a weekly coloring journal. Each week, your child colors a page that matches what's happening in the garden. Week one: seed packets. Week two: tiny green sprouts. Week three: the first tomato flower.
Staple the pages together at the end of summer and you've got a visual record of the growing season. My daughter added labels to hers last year, writing the date and what she noticed. "June 22: tomato is taller than me" was a highlight.
Summer celebrations
7. Fourth of July fireworks coloring
Print sun and rainbow themed pages alongside fireworks and American flag coloring sheets. Hand out red, white, and blue crayons only, and challenge your kid to make every page work with just those three colors. It's a fun constraint that forces creative thinking.
For a group activity, set up a coloring station at your Fourth of July cookout. Print 30-40 pages, scatter crayons across the table, and let the kids rotate in and out between running through the sprinkler and eating watermelon. The finished pages make good decorations taped to the fence or strung on a line with clothespins.
8. Ice cream and summer treats coloring
Print pages of ice cream cones, popsicles, watermelon slices, and lemonade. After coloring, take a trip to the actual ice cream shop and let your child order the flavor they colored. My son colored a mint chocolate chip cone and then insisted on ordering the same thing. He was very serious about the accuracy.
You can also use these as menu cards for a "summer treats party" at home. Each kid colors a treat page, and then you make a simplified version in the kitchen together. Frozen banana pops, smoothies, or just popsicles from a mold.
9. Summer birthday party coloring station
If your child has a summer birthday, a coloring station is easy to set up and barely needs supervision. Print 40-50 summer-themed pages (mix of beach, animals, ice cream, and outdoor scenes), put out buckets of crayons and markers, and let kids color between the structured activities.
The finished pages double as party favors. Roll each kid's stack, tie it with a ribbon, and send it home. Parents appreciate a take-home that isn't candy. This works for ages 3-10 without any modifications, which is useful when you've got mixed ages at the party.
Travel and rainy day activities
10. Road trip coloring kit
Put together a zippered pencil case with 10-15 printed coloring pages (folded in half), a small box of colored pencils, and a clipboard for a hard surface. Toss it in the back seat before you leave. This kit has saved us on more than one long drive.
Colored pencils work better than crayons in a hot car (more on that in the supplies section below). Pick themes that match your destination: headed to the mountains? Print nature pages. Beach trip? Ocean animals. Visiting grandma in another state? Print a map coloring page and let your child color each state you drive through. That last one kept my kids occupied for an entire stretch of I-95.
11. Rainy summer day coloring marathon
Summer storms happen, and when they do, a coloring marathon fills the afternoon. Print a big stack of 20+ pages across different themes, set up the dining table with all the coloring supplies you own, and put on some music or a podcast in the background.
The difference between a regular coloring session and a "marathon" is the volume. Let your kids spread out, take breaks, come back, switch colors. My rule is: the pages stay on the table all day, and anyone can sit down and color whenever they want. Coloring stops being a scheduled thing and just becomes background. The house feels calmer on those days, even with three kids inside.
12. Travel journal coloring pages
For a family vacation, print one coloring page for each day of the trip. Your child colors it at the end of the day and writes (or dictates) one sentence about what they did. "Tuesday: we saw dolphins from the boat." Pair with a dolphin coloring page. "Wednesday: it rained and we played cards." Pair with a rainbow page.
Bind the pages when you get home. It's a trip journal that your child actually made, and it's a lot more personal than a photo album. My kids pull out last summer's journal every few months and flip through it, remembering details I'd already forgotten.
Picking the right supplies for summer coloring
Summer adds a variable that other seasons don't: heat. If you're coloring outside or in the car, your supplies need to hold up.
Crayons are fine for indoor summer coloring, but they soften and get waxy in direct sunlight. If you're setting up outside, stick to a shaded spot. Crayola Classic Crayons (24-pack, about $3) are the standard. They'll survive a warm day in the shade but will melt in a hot car, so don't leave them on the dashboard.
Colored pencils are the best all-around summer option. They don't melt, they work on any surface, and they're easy to pack for travel. A 24-pack of Crayola Colored Pencils (about $5) covers everything.
Washable markers are great for home coloring sessions where bright colors matter. Crayola SuperTips (50-pack, about $12) are still my go-to for group activities and parties. Just keep them capped in the heat, since they dry out faster in warm weather.
Paper tip: If your kids are coloring outside, clip the pages to a clipboard. Wind is the enemy of coloring pages on a picnic table. A dollar store clipboard solves it instantly.
For a deeper comparison of coloring tools, we put together a guide on crayons, colored pencils, or markers that covers the pros and cons of each.
The learning that sneaks in
Coloring helps kids develop fine motor skills and practice focusing. (We covered the research in our piece on why coloring is good for your kid.) But summer themes create natural openings for extra learning.
Vocabulary shows up everywhere. "Bioluminescence" is a big word, but it sticks when your child learns it while coloring a firefly. "Coral reef" and "tide pool" come alive when they're connected to a coloring page and a conversation.
Science is easy to weave in. Ocean animals lead to questions about habitats and food chains. Gardening pages open up conversations about photosynthesis. And a bug hunt covers more ground than you'd expect. My daughter asked about why fireflies glow and we ended up reading about it for twenty minutes.
Geography fits naturally with travel activities. We color a map before road trips, and last year my son wanted to look up where sea turtles live, which turned into a conversation about how it's winter in Australia when it's summer here.
Just keep it casual. Ask a question while they're coloring. Look something up together on your phone. There's no quiz at the end. Summer learning works best when it doesn't feel like school.
Start this week
Pick two or three activities from this list and try them before the weekend. The ocean animals deep dive (#2) is the easiest to start since all you need is a printer and some crayons. The road trip kit (#10) takes five minutes to put together and will pay off the next time you're in the car for more than an hour.
Print a few ocean, fish, and sun coloring pages tonight, set them on the table with whatever coloring supplies you have, and see what happens. Last time we did this, my son colored straight through dinner prep and then asked if we could "do coloring again tomorrow." We could. We did.
Art Educator & Content Director
Art educator with 12+ years of classroom experience. Certified in Art Education and Child Development. Helping families and teachers unlock the power of creative play.
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