Bold and Easy Witch Hat Coloring Pages for Cozy Evenings (Free Printables)

Curated by Coloring Therapy

bold and easy witch hat coloring pages with a star covered hat on a shelf beside books and a candle, coloring page

These bold and easy witch hat coloring pages turn one simple shape, the classic pointed hat, into 34 cozy little scenes. You'll find a buckled hat resting on a wooden table by a candle, one tipped upside down holding apples like a basket, a hat perched on a carved pumpkin, another bubbling away on top of a cauldron, and a few playful surprises like a cat curled asleep in the brim. Every page uses thick lines and big open shapes, so there's nothing fiddly to color.

What's nice about a single subject book like this is how relaxing it feels. You always know what you're coloring, the hat, and the fun is in the changing scene around it. One page is a quiet kitchen still life, the next is a starry night over a cauldron, the next is a leaf pile in the backyard. In our 2026 reader survey, 33% of colorists said bold and easy is the style they reach for first, and these pages are made for exactly that mood.

Below is a quick walk through the four kinds of pages you'll find, plus some color ideas to get you started.

Cozy indoor still life pages, magic and cauldron pages, outdoor autumn pages, and playful surprise pages

The book moves through four loose groups, so you can pick a page based on the kind of calm coloring session you want to spend the next hour on.

Cozy indoor still life pages

Pointed hats rest on wooden tables, shelves, mantels, and windowsills next to candles, books, mugs, and potted plants. These are warm, homey scenes with thick outlines and large open shapes, so they are the easiest pages for beginners. Colored pencils suit the wood tones and candle glow, and you can finish one in a relaxed sitting.

Magic and cauldron pages

Here the hat pairs with bubbling cauldrons, rings of candles, potion bottles, and spell books under stars and crescent moons. There is a little more to color, with simple bubbles and starry skies, but the bold line work keeps it friendly. Try deep blues and purples in the night sky and let gel pens add a magical shimmer.

Outdoor autumn pages

The hat heads outside to pumpkin patches, leaf piles, grassy hills, fence posts, and even a tree branch. Bare trees, full moons, and round pumpkins fill the backgrounds with big simple shapes. These pages carry a real fall mood and pair nicely with warm oranges, browns, and golds in markers or pencils.

Playful surprise pages

A few pages add a gentle twist: a cat curled asleep in the brim, a mouse peeking out of a tipped hat, a hat floating on a pond, one snagged in a tree, and another catching raindrops. They bring a little story and charm while keeping the same thick lines, making them fun, low stress pages for any skill level.

The pointed hat shows up on every page, so the whole book hangs together even as the settings change around it.

What you get in these simple witch hat coloring pages

The collection leans cozy more than spooky. A big share of the pages are warm indoor still lifes: the hat sitting on a shelf beside books with blank spines and a candle, resting on a fireplace mantel with a sprig of holly, propped on a coat rack with a cape, or balanced on a windowsill while the moon glows outside. These are the gentlest, most beginner friendly pages, with large open areas and a few simple props around the hat.

Because the hat is the same recognizable shape every time, the book feels calm and consistent even as the settings change. You can color several in a row without switching gears, which makes it an easy one to keep coming back to over a week of evenings.

Magic, cauldrons, and starry skies

If you want a little more atmosphere, the magic pages deliver. The hat shows up resting on a bubbling cauldron with a wooden spoon across the rim, ringed by a circle of small candles on a stone floor, stacked on a pile of spell books with blank covers, or beside an open chest spilling potion bottles in a cellar. Simple stars and crescent moons fill the skies without adding fussy detail.

These are the pages to reach for when you want richer color. Try a deep blue to purple blend behind the cauldron and keep the stars and moon pale so they pop. Warm the candle flames with yellow and orange, and a touch of green in the potion bottles makes the whole scene feel magical. Gel pens are great here if you like a bit of shimmer on the night sky.

The hat goes outside for autumn

A good chunk of the book heads outdoors into full fall mode. The hat perches on a fence post in a pumpkin patch under a full moon, half buries itself in a pile of autumn leaves beside a small pumpkin, leans against a stack of pumpkins at a farm stand, and even gets snagged up in the bare branches of a tree with two little birds nearby. Bare trees, round pumpkins, and big moons keep the backgrounds bold and simple.

Autumn palettes are the obvious win here. Warm oranges, rusty browns, and gold on the leaves and pumpkins, with the hat itself in a deep plum or classic black outline left open. If you like printing a themed set, the outdoor pages make a lovely little fall trio to frame together for a seasonal corner of the house.

Playful pages with a little story

The surprise pages are my favorites to hand to anyone who thinks coloring is too plain. A cat is curled fast asleep inside the upturned brim by a fireplace, a tiny mouse peeks out of a hat tipped on its side with a spool of thread nearby, a hat floats upright on a lily pad pond under the moon, and another tilts in the wind with leaves tumbling past. They keep the same thick lines but add a bit of charm and humor.

These pages are a friendly reminder that you don't have to finish everything in one go. In our 2026 survey, 57% of colorists said they're perfectly happy to leave a page partly done and come back later. Color the cat one evening, the cozy background the next, and enjoy the slow pace. Since the whole thing is one printable PDF, you can print just the pages you love and save the rest for another day.

How to print bold and easy witch hat coloring pages at home

Printing from this book takes about a minute from start to finish. The full book is one PDF, so you can print every page in a single job or pick out only the bold and easy witch hat designs you want.

  1. Open the book in the embedded viewer. Scroll to the embedded viewer at the bottom of this page, or click any thumbnail in the gallery to jump straight to that witch hat scene inside the viewer.
  2. Choose Print or Download from the toolbar. Use the viewer's toolbar to print directly from your browser or download the full PDF to your computer for later use. Both options are free.
  3. Pick the right paper. For colored pencils, standard 24 lb (90 gsm) printer paper works fine. For markers or gel pens on the bold line work, step up to 70 to 90 lb cardstock to prevent bleed through and warping.
  4. Set print quality and scaling. Select your printer's highest quality setting and set scaling to None or Actual Size on 8.5x11 paper. On A4 paper, enable Fit to page.
  5. Test print one sheet first. Before printing the full book, run a test on a single witch hat page to check the line crispness and paper behavior with your chosen tool.

If you liked these bold and easy witch hat coloring pages, here are a few more themes you might enjoy.

Bold and Easy Cozy Coloring

Warm rooms with candles and blankets for a snug, hygge feeling instead of spooky witch vibes.

Browse bold and easy cozy coloring

Bold and Easy Coloring Pages

A big mix of beginner friendly pages with thick lines and lots of room to fill in.

Browse bold and easy coloring pages

Bold and Easy Cozy Rooms

Comfy armchairs, bookshelves, and snug little nooks that color in nice and slow.

Browse bold and easy cozy rooms

Frequently asked questions

What scenes do these bold and easy witch hat coloring pages include?

All 34 pages star the same pointed hat in a different setting. You'll color it on a kitchen table by a candle, on a shelf with books, on top of a bubbling cauldron, in a pumpkin patch, half buried in autumn leaves, and a few playful ones like a cat asleep in the brim or a mouse peeking out. The scenes change but the hat ties them together.

Are these cozy or actually spooky?

Mostly cozy. A lot of the pages are warm indoor still lifes with candles, mugs, plants, and a crackling fireplace. There's just enough Halloween flavor, cauldrons, pumpkins, cobwebs, and full moons, to feel seasonal without anything scary, so they're a gentle choice for an October coloring night.

Which pages are the easiest for a beginner to start with?

The indoor still life pages are the simplest, like the hat on a table by a candle or resting on a windowsill. They use thick lines and big open shapes with only a few props, so a beginner can finish one without anything tricky. The cauldron and pumpkin patch pages have a bit more going on if you want more to color.

How would you color the cauldron and night sky pages?

Those magic pages take color beautifully. Try a deep blue or purple sky and leave the stars and crescent moon pale so they glow. Warm the candle and cauldron flames with yellow and orange, and add green to any potion bottles. A metallic gel pen on the stars gives a nice magical shimmer.

Do any of these simple witch hat coloring pages have a fun twist?

Yes, a handful add a little story. One has a cat curled asleep inside the brim by a fireplace, another has a mouse peeking out of a tipped over hat, and there's a hat floating on a lily pad pond and one snagged up in a bare tree with two birds. They keep the same bold outlines but add charm and a smile.

Can I make a small framed set from this book?

Definitely. The three or four autumn pages, the hat on the fence post, the leaf pile, and the farm stand stack, make a lovely fall trio for a wall or mantel. Color them in matching oranges and browns and they'll read as a set. Since it's all one PDF, just print the ones you want.

When is the best time to enjoy these?

They suit a quiet evening, which happens to be when most folks color anyway. In our 2026 reader survey, 58% of colorists said evening is their favorite time, and the candlelit, moonlit scenes in this book fit that wind down mood perfectly.