Snowdrop coloring page outline
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Snowdrop Coloring Page

In: Wildflowers & Plants

Fun fact: Common snowdrops are often the first flowers to bloom each year, sometimes in January.
Common name
Snowdrop
Scientific name
Galanthus nivalis
Family
Amaryllidaceae
Habitat
European woodlands

The Snowdrop is one of the more interesting plants in the Nature Sketch Pages library โ€” a real species, not a cartoon, with a real story behind its shape, its colors, and its place in the natural world.

Coloring this page is a great way to get kids talking about more than just appearance. The Snowdrop is most often found in European woodlands, where its body shape, color, and behavior are tuned to the specific demands of that environment. Look closely at the outline before reaching for crayons. Where on the body is the heaviest line work? What features stand out? What might this plant look like in motion?

Common snowdrops are often the first flowers to bloom each year, sometimes in January. A small, surprising fact like this is one of the easiest ways to make a coloring page sticky. Read it aloud while the kids are coloring and watch how often it gets repeated at dinner that night.

Print this page on standard letter or A4 paper, hand it out alongside a small set of crayons or colored pencils, and let kids decide whether to color the Snowdrop realistically or invent their own version. Both approaches teach something different โ€” realistic coloring trains observation, invented coloring builds creative confidence.

If your kids enjoy this page, browse the rest of the plant collection for more closely related species, or jump to one of the ecosystem packs to see the Snowdrop alongside the other plants and animals it shares its habitat with.

How to use this page

Print at letter size on standard 8.5ร—11" paper. The outline is designed with thick, kid-friendly lines that work with crayons, colored pencils, and washable markers. For classroom use, print one copy per student and keep a colored reference image nearby so kids can match real-life colors โ€” or encourage creative interpretations of habitat and pattern.

Extension activities

Pair this page with a short writing prompt: ask kids to describe where this snowdrop lives, what it eats, and one thing it can do that humans can't. For older students, use the scientific name as a launch point to explore the broader family and how related species share traits.

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