Stacking Apple Coloring Pages inside a folder keeps them ready for quiet mornings before breakfast. Crayons rest on the table. Pencils wait in the cup.
A crisp black-and-white outline fills the page. Kids pick one and start shading. The scene feels simple but alive.
Each ready-to-print sheet shows something different—an apple hanging from a branch, another balancing on a fence post, a few clustered near a wooden crate. No two drawings look the same.
Did you know? Some apples grow with tiny white dots called lenticels that help them breathe.
What’s on the Page
Every simple line drawing includes the apple itself, plus one or two surrounding objects. A tree limb curves overhead. A bucket tilts on its side. A checkered cloth drapes across a table edge.
These are the kinds of details kids notice right away. They fill in the shapes, follow the curves, and decide where to press harder with the marker.
One or two fit between homework and dinner. A few slip into a travel bag easily. Parents print a handful and tuck them into a folder. Kids pull one out when they need something to do with their hands. Coloring helps with hand-eye coordination.
Scenes shift from page to page. An apple might rest against a stone wall. Another might hang low on a branch beside a few leaves.
One drawing shows apples arranged in a neat row inside a shallow basket. Another features a single apple leaning beside a watering can. The layouts stay clean, but the variety keeps things interesting.
Details in Each Drawing
- Apple resting against a wooden fence rail
- Apple hanging from a curved branch with a few leaves nearby
- Two apples stacking inside a woven basket
- Apple leaning beside a garden trowel on dirt ground
- Apple balancing on top of a tree stump
- Apple peeking out from behind a clay pot
- Apple holding steady on a windowsill ledge
- Three apples arranging in a line across a picnic blanket
- Apple resting against a low stone step
- Apple climbing position on a ladder rung
- Apple pulling visual weight on a kitchen counter
- Apple reaching toward a small metal pail
- Apple stacking with others inside a wooden crate
- Apple leaning on the edge of a wicker tray
- Printable Apple Coloring Pages showing an apple beside a folded napkin
Creative Tip
Try shading the apple’s surface with short, curved strokes to show roundness. Use a darker pencil for the stem and any leaves. Press lightly where sunlight would hit the fruit.
How to Print
Scroll down until you see the image you want. Select it with a quick tap or click. Hit the orange “PRINT” button that appears at the top. Grab your crayons and start shading right away.
Do all the pages show apples hanging from trees?
No, some apples rest on surfaces or sit inside containers like baskets or crates.
Are there leaves on every page?
Not every one—some drawings focus only on the apple and nearby objects.
Can I print more than one at a time?
Yes, you can select and print multiple sheets back to back.



















