Rackets Swinging Across Courts and Nets

A firm grip wraps around a racket handle in these Tennis Coloring Pages, with strings stretched tight inside an oval frame and the arm pulled back mid-swing.

The net runs low across the middle of the court. Baseline markings cut straight lines beneath the feet. A single ball floats just above the racket face.

One of these fits right into a Sunday afternoon table stack without taking up much room. The stance is wide. Open sections across the outfit and court give plenty of space to fill in.


Court Lines and Action Poses Worth Printing

Tennis Coloring Pages bring a solid range of positions and settings that feel different from one page to the next. One hand-drawn outline shows a racket stretched overhead during a serve with the ball tossed high.

Another print-ready page captures a low volley return near the net with bent knees and a short backswing. Shapes stay clean throughout.

  • A tennis racket resting against a bench beside a court with a water bottle sitting nearby
  • A tennis ball reaching the top of its arc above a pointed racket during a toss
  • A tennis racket held forward at the net with the player leaning into a volley position
  • A tennis ball peeking out from inside an open sports bag with racket handles sticking up
  • A tennis racket pulling back behind the shoulder in a wide forehand stance on a baseline

Each ink-friendly design uses heavy borders around the racket, ball, and court elements. Nothing thin enough to vanish during printing. No overlapping clutter in the background.


Tennis Coloring Pages work well for kids who like sports scenes without needing complicated detail.

Younger ones grab the simpler layouts — a single racket and ball on a plain background. Older kids reach for the full-court scenes with movement lines and net detail.

The racket strings break into a grid pattern. Small squares repeat across the face. That structure helps build focus and patience.

Some scenes place the action at the baseline with long court lines stretching toward the net. Others bring everything close to the net with tight angles and short reach distances. Pose variety ranges from calm standing holds to full-stretch lunges, keeping the set interesting.


Quick Fact: Tennis rackets used to be made from wood, and they were much heavier than the ones used now.


Press a pencil firmly along the racket frame edge and lighter across the string grid for a quick contrast effect.


Tennis Coloring Pages have enough court and equipment detail to keep kids working through multiple pages without things getting stale.


How to Print

  1. Scroll down to see all available tennis designs
  2. Select the image you want to print
  3. Click the orange “PRINT” button
  4. Start coloring right away

What equipment appears in the tennis outlines?

Rackets, balls, nets, benches, and sports bags across various court scenes.

Can younger kids color these without difficulty?

Yes — several pages use large simple shapes with minimal background lines.

Do the designs include full court settings?

Some show full courts with baselines and nets, others focus on close-up gear.