A tall stalk with full ears of corn standing in an open field is where Corn Coloring Pages start. The husk peels back in layers, each one curling away from neat rows of kernels underneath.
Silk threads spill from the top, thin and tangled. Every kernel sits packed tight against the next. That takes patience.
Harvest Scenes and Garden Rows
Corn Coloring Pages spread across settings where corn actually grows — wide fields, backyard gardens, wooden farm stands, and harvest wagons.
One outline drawing places a single ear of corn on a rough wooden table with the husk half-open. Another stands a full stalk upright with broad leaves bending sideways from the stem.
Kernel rows run perfectly straight on some ears, slightly uneven on others. The difference matters when coloring slowly.
Scene Layouts
A pair of corn ears resting inside a woven basket near a split-rail fence. Leaves drape over the basket rim. Behind them, a barn wall shows plank lines and a hanging rope. A second layout puts a single stalk in a garden row with soil mounds visible at the base and a wooden stake tied beside it.
Corn Coloring Pages also set these scenes near autumn displays — a hay bale stack, a wheelbarrow full of ears, a scarecrow post with corn stalks bundled at the bottom.
Each printable activity sheet holds enough surrounding detail to fill a full session. A stack of these works during long car rides.
The husk alone keeps hands busy — layered wrapping with curved edges and long vein lines running tip to base. Silk thread tangles at the top reward careful, steady strokes.
Kids notice how each leaf overlaps the one beneath it. That layered structure builds focus naturally. Corn Coloring Pages work well because the subject itself is full of repeating shapes.
A line art scene near a farmstand gives space for both the corn and the surrounding tools. Printable corn sheets hold sharp detail even on regular paper.
Fun Fact: Each silk thread on an ear of corn connects to exactly one kernel inside the husk.
Try using a fine-tipped marker to outline the kernel grid first, then fill each square with a crayon. Press lighter on the husk leaves to keep them looking thin.
Corn drawing templates place the subject in different real locations — barn shelves, kitchen counters, open fields, festival tables. The corn stays central but the backdrop shifts each time.
Corn Coloring Pages stay interesting because husk positions and stalk angles change from scene to scene. No two pages repeat the same arrangement.
How to Print
Scroll down and browse every corn scene below. Pick the one you like most. Press the orange “PRINT” button right underneath it. Then start coloring immediately.
Do the corn ears show individual kernel rows?
Yes, most ears display full kernel grids with clear row lines.
Are there full corn stalks with leaves in these scenes?
Several scenes include tall stalks with broad leaves bending outward.
Can I find corn placed inside baskets or farm settings?
Multiple scenes show corn in baskets, wagons, and on wooden tables.



















