Lions Roaring Across Rocky Plains and Tall Grass

Thick mane lines curve around a broad face in these Lion Coloring Pages, each strand flowing outward like layered rope. The jaw sits slightly open.

Heavy paws press flat against a rocky ledge with cracks running underneath. Behind the figure, a few simple grass blades rise from the ground line. One of these slips into the car console for a quick parking lot activity.

The body is solid. Wide shapes fill the chest area, leaving plenty of open space for shading.


Mane Details and Wild Poses to Work Through

Lion Coloring Pages cover a good mix of stances and environments that keep each page feeling different. One hand-drawn outline catches a lion mid-stride across a dry plain with dust lines trailing behind each paw.

Another print-ready page places the animal flat on its belly, chin resting on crossed front legs. The shapes stay bold throughout.

  1. A lion resting against a large fallen tree trunk with scattered leaves on the ground around it
  2. A lion reaching toward a low branch hanging over a shallow stream
  3. Two lions stacking close together on a wide flat rock with grass tufts at the edges
  4. A lion peeking around the base of a thick baobab trunk with roots spreading wide
  5. A lion climbing a sloped boulder with claw marks sketched into the stone surface
  6. A lion leaning forward over a ridge line with rolling hills stretching behind it

Each ink-friendly design keeps the outlines heavy enough to hold up on regular printer paper. No fragile lines. No backgrounds that compete with the main subject.


Lion Coloring Pages work across different ages without needing separate sets. Younger kids stick with the simpler standing poses — a lion on flat ground, tail curved behind.

Older kids reach for the scenes with more going on. Mid-leap catches, jaw-open roars, wind-swept mane lines pulling sideways.

The mane sections break into clear segments. Almost like petals fanning out from the face. That structure helps build focus and patience.

Some scenes drop the lion onto a rocky outcrop with stacked stones underneath. Others bring it down to ground level near a watering hole with rippled lines and pebbled edges. 

Pose variety shifts from calm to active across the full set, so the stack never drags.


Eagles have nests, but lions have prides — a group of lions is actually called a pride, and one pride can stretch across a huge territory.


Try using the side of a crayon across the mane area in short overlapping strokes to build up a shaggy texture fast.


Lion Coloring Pages give enough scene range to keep kids working through the stack without losing interest along the way.


How to Print

  1. Scroll down through all the lion designs below
  2. Select the image that catches your eye
  3. Click the orange “PRINT” button
  4. Start coloring immediately

What kind of scenes do the lion outlines show?

Resting, roaring, leaping, and walking across plains, rocks, and grasslands.

Are these pages suitable for younger kids?

Yes — several have large open shapes with minimal background detail.

Do markers bleed through on these prints?

Thick outlines help contain ink, but placing a spare sheet underneath helps.