Download the bee on a flower coloring page as a print-ready PDF, available in both A4 and US Letter sizes so it prints correctly no matter where you live — just pick the version that matches your paper and print at 100% scale (or "fit to page") so nothing gets cropped at the edges. Each download includes the full black-and-white artwork, uncropped and sized to fill the page, plus a small color example in the corner if you'd like a reference before you start. The PDF is for personal, non-commercial use — print as many copies as you'd like for yourself, your kids, or a classroom, just please don't resell or redistribute the artwork itself. Prefer to skip the printer altogether? The same picture is ready to color digitally inside the free Cozy Color by Number app for a quick coloring break on the go.
Not sure where to start? Here are a few color ideas to bring the bee on a flower scene to life, whether you're working on the printed page or coloring it digitally in Cozy Color by Number:
This picture shows a fuzzy bee resting on the petals of a large, open flower bloom. It's a full, uncropped black-and-white line-art design meant to be printed and filled in with pencils, markers, or crayons — bright and cheerful. A simple, sunny design that works well for kids and beginners. This bee on a flower coloring page is part of the free printable library from Cozy Color by Number, the paint-by-number coloring app. The scene features a fuzzy bee, a large flower bloom, detailed petal veins, and delicate leaf edges, giving you plenty of detail to fill in at your own pace without feeling overwhelming. It's bright and cheerful, which makes it a nice fit for a simple, sunny design that works well for kids and beginners. Because the artwork is delivered as a clean, high-resolution PDF, lines stay crisp even after printing, so the page holds up well whether you're using colored pencils, gel pens, or markers. If you'd rather skip the printer, the same picture is available inside the Cozy Color by Number app, where you can color it digitally by simply tapping each numbered area — a good option for a quick coloring break between paper sessions. In terms of complexity, it's on the simpler side, with clear, well-spaced shapes that make it approachable for beginners and quick sessions alike.
Florals like this one look great with a gradient approach: color the center of each petal lighter and gradually deepen the shade toward the edges. Real flowers rarely use pure, flat color, so blending two or three close shades — like blush into rose, or butter yellow into gold — will make the bouquet feel a lot more lifelike by the time you're done. Leaves and stems benefit from the same idea in green: a fresh, lighter green toward the light and a deeper, slightly blue-green in the shadows helps the whole arrangement feel like it has real depth instead of flat, uniform color. Floral pages tend to be a gentle, low-pressure pick since there's no single "correct" color scheme — real flowers come in nearly every color, so it's hard to color one the "wrong" way.
Prefer to skip the printer? The bee on a flower picture, along with thousands of others, is available inside the free Cozy Color by Number app. Instead of pencils and paper, you tap numbered sections on your screen to fill them in with color, which makes it an easy way to unwind during a short break. New pictures are added to the app every day, covering mandalas, animals, flowers, cozy scenes, and more — so once you've finished this page, there's always something new to color next.
Liked this one? Here are a few more free printable coloring pages from the same flowers collection and beyond: