Here for the spooky-cute stuff? We pulled together a Pokémon Halloween set that’s more sweet than scary, and great for trick-or-treat week, classroom centers, party activity tables, or just a quiet-time color session.
For example, Pikachu in a witch hat, Gengar in a pumpkin patch, Eevee with a tiny cape… The whole vibe is festive, fun, and kid-approved.
You’ll get 15 free printable pages you can download and print in seconds, plus a premium full-collection coloring book if you want the complete set.
The book is a digital download, ready to print, and organized from easy to more detailed designs, so everyone from little artists to grown-up fans can jump in and color.
Free Printable Gallery
Scroll the gallery below for 15 spooky-cute Pokémon pages, like Pikachu in a hat, Gengar with pumpkins, Eevee in a tiny cape, and more.
Right-click any preview to download it in PNG format, or click on the Download button to get a printer-ready PDF.
Everything is sized for US Letter, and you can print at 100% scale (skip “Fit to page”) for crisp outlines.
How to Download and Print
Simply click the Download button located under any preview. It will download the PDF, which is excellent for printing and maintains razor-sharp lines.
Now pop it into your print dialog (Adobe Reader, Preview on Mac, or your browser’s print). Two settings matter most:
- Size/Scale: set to Actual Size / 100%. Resist the “Fit to page” button. It quietly shrinks your artwork and makes the outlines look thin.
- Paper Size: choose US Letter. (If your printer auto-switches to A4, just flip it back.)
Next, pick your quality. Choose Normal or Best/High. Avoid Draft/Eco. It can make lines look faint or dotted. If your printer shows “Save ink/toner,” turn that off for crisp black outlines. Printing in black and white or Grayscale is perfectly fine, the pages are line art.
Paper time. For crayons and colored pencils, regular copy paper works. However, if you want a slight upgrade, opt for 90–120 gsm (≈ 24–32 lb text).
If using markers, choose 160+ gsm (≈ 65–80 lb cover) so ink doesn’t ripple the page. Either way, print single-sided. If you do use markers on lighter paper, slide a scrap sheet behind to catch any bleed.
For teachers (and party hosts), you can print bundles of 10–20, single-sided, and stack each design with a blank slip on top for names. Staple top-left, pop stacks into trays, and you’ve got instant rotation stations.
Troubleshooting in a pinch:
- Print looks small? Recheck the actual size (100%) and ensure that “Fit” or “Shrink to Fit” is disabled.
- Lines look fuzzy? Use the PDF version and set print quality to High.
- Edges cut off? Turn off “Borderless” and maintain standard margins, or enable “Borderless” and keep the scale at 100%.
Some Pro Coloring Tips
1. Pick a Spooky-Cute Palette
Leep the colors simple and punchy so kids (and you!) get quick wins. Think pumpkin orange, deep violet, acid green, moon gray, and midnight black.
Use orange for pumpkins, capes, and candle glow, violet for night skies and witchy hat, acid green for slime, mist, or magical sparks, moon gray for stone paths and clouds, and black for bold shadows.
Limit each page to 3–4 primary colors, then add tiny accents. Fewer colors = cleaner results.
2. Add Some Glow
Glow sells the Halloween mood. Around lanterns, candles, or window light, leave a thin white ring right next to the light source.
Then softly blend yellow → orange as you move outward. With pencils: tiny circles, light pressure, layer slowly. With markers: quick feather strokes outward from the light, then tap orange over the edges while the yellow is still damp.
Finish with the background color pressed lightly over the outer edge of the glow to “sink” it into the scene.
3. Easy Shadows = Instant Depth
Decide where your light is coming from (top left, for example). Shade the opposite edges of bodies, hats, and pumpkins a little darker. Keep it consistent: all shadow-sides on the same side. Even a 10% darker pass of the same color is enough to make the character pop.
4. Texture Tricks
- Fur (Eevee, etc.): Use short, quick crosshatch strokes that follow the fur direction: jaw to cheek, chest downwards, tail flicks. Start with a light base coat, then add a darker crosshatch in the shadow areas (under the chin, behind the ears, and the base of the tail).
- Round bodies (Jigglypuff, Gastly): Go for soft circular shading. Color in tiny overlapping circles, lighter in the middle, heavier toward the edges. If you have a colorless blender or a very light pencil/marker in the same family, run it over the transition to melt the gradient.
5. Outline Magic
After you color, take a fine liner or a darker pencil and thicken the outline on the shadow side only. This “weighting” tricks the eye into seeing depth. Add micro shadows under hats, under paws, and where bodies overlap pumpkins.
Fast Blending Formula (works for most areas)
- Base coat light.
- Add midtone on the shadow side in short strokes.
- Deepen just the corner/edge with a darker version of the same color.
- Glide back with the light color to soften the seam.
Apply this to capes, pumpkins, skies, anywhere.
6. Backgrounds
If you don’t want to fill the whole page, try vignette shading: a ring of color behind the character that fades into white. Deep violet or moon gray works great. Add a few simple stars (dot with a gel pen) or mist swirls (light gray loops) to suggest atmosphere without hours of work.
7. Marker vs. Pencil
- Markers: Work light to dark, one area at a time, while the ink is wet. Place a scrap sheet behind to catch bleed. Avoid overworking the same spot.
- Pencils: Layer lightly, sharpen often, and burnish (press a bit harder) only at the end for shine.
Color Callouts
- Pumpkins: Pumpkin orange + a touch of red-orange in creases. Moon gray in the grooves.
- Night Sky: Deep violet base, midnight black at corners, a few white gel-pen stars.
- Slime/Magic: Acid green with yellow highlights near the glow, a rim of darker green outside.
Keep it playful, keep it light, and remember: contrast (light vs. dark) and glow do most of the heavy lifting.
Halloween Pokémon Coloring Book: Full Collection

Want the whole spooky-cute set in one click? Buy our Pokémon Halloween-themed sheets for just $1.99, neatly organized by difficulty level, so every artist finds their groove.
It’s a high-res PDF, single-sided (marker-friendly), with a comfy bleed margin, and it comes in US Letter size.
You also get fun extras: a printable cover page (great for a binder or gift), practice pages, and more to celebrate finished masterpieces.
Lines are bold, crisp, and easy to color. Instant digital download. There’s no shipping. Print as many as you need for personal/classroom use.
How to Use the Book
Home binder or party pack: Print the pages you love, 3-hole punch, and drop them into a binder. Add tab dividers for difficulty level so kids can self-select. When hosting a party, pre-print a stack, tuck them in a tray with cups of crayons/markers, and you’ve got an instant activity table.
Classroom Stations: Group pages by difficulty and set up three stations. Timer on for 10–12 minutes each. Kids rotate, pick a page that matches their mood, and color away. Keep a “finished” basket and hand out the stickers for a quick win.
Quick Contests: Run a mini “Color-and-Candy” contest with tiny prizes.
FAQs
Are These Coloring Pages Free?
Yes. You can print and share them for personal use and classrooms. No resale. Please keep the small credit lines while sharing. You can print as many copies as you need at home.
Do You Have Both PDF and PNG?
Yes. Each design includes a print-ready PDF, and you can also right-click on the image to download it as a PNG. PDFs give crisp lines on paper. You can also import PNG on digital coloring tools.
What Paper Size Should I Use?
You can download in US Letter format and print at 100 percent scale. For markers, select thicker paper to prevent the ink from bleeding.
Can I Share in My Classroom?
Yes. Print for students as often as needed. You can share the page link with parents, too. Please do not upload files to another site.
Can I Post My Colored Pages Online?
Yes. Share your art and tag us. Post your finished art, and we’ll share it on our social media too.
Is Commercial Use Allowed?
No. These are intended for personal and classroom use only. Do not sell, resell, or include in paid bundles. All rights for these images are reserved to FunFillColor.
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