⛵
Boats, Ships & Water Vehicles to Color
157 itemsFrom a tiny rowboat drifting across a foggy lake to a Viking longship cutting through open seas, this collection covers the full range of water travel. Friendly animal sailors — an owl captain fixing a sailboat, a raccoon fisherman in a rowboat, a fox on a tiny boat — share pages with purely nautical classics like Venetian gondolas, catamarans racing in a tropical bay, and tall ships at sunset. Every scene is drawn for children who love the water, whether their interest is adventure, fishing, or simply watching boats go by.

Racing Catamaran
7-9 years
Viking Longship
7-9 years
Fishing Trawler Unloading Catch
10+ years
Snail Shell Boat
4-6 years
Chameleon Radik the Sailor
4-7 years
Duck Paddle Boat in Park
2-3 years
Viking Longship
10+ years
Venetian Gondola
7-9 years
Colorful Kayak in Tropical Bay
4-6 years
Viking Longship in Stormy Sea
7-9 years
Tiny Wooden Rowboat with Lantern
2-3 years
Icebreaker Ship in a Frozen Fjord
4-6 years
Fishing Trawler in a Stormy Sea
7-9 years
Viking Longship on Choppy Sea
7-9 years
Octopus Bublik the Fisherman
4-6 years
Fishing Trawler Unloading Catch
7-9 years
Catamaran Race in Tropical Bay
7-9 years
Viking Longship in Fjord
10+ years
Tall Ship in a Sunset Storm
10+ years
Icebreaker Ship
4-6 years
Tall Ship at Sunset
10+ years
Age
Coloring Categories
Popular Tags
This section gathers 157 colorings pages devoted to water vehicles of every scale and era — from a cheerful canoe and a rowboat with a lantern to a fishing trawler, a racing kayak, and a grand tall ship. Scenes span calm inland lakes, misty harbors, and open tropical bays, giving young artists a wide variety of settings and vessel types to explore. Character-driven pages featuring sailors like Chameleon Radik and Husky Lutik sit alongside straightforward nautical subjects, so the collection works equally well for kids drawn to stories and those who simply want to draw boats.
Every page in this section uses clean black-and-white outlines that print clearly on a standard home printer — no special paper or ink needed. Individual pages can be downloaded one at a time, or several can be queued up for a longer session, making the collection practical for a classroom project or a themed afternoon at home. Kids who prefer to work without paper can open any coloring directly in the browser and use the built-in online coloring tool instead.
