Lotus Wheel Mandala

This coloring page is available as a free PDF download in two formats: A4 and US Letter. Pick whichever matches your printer and paper, and set your printer to 100% scale or "fit to page" so the full, uncropped line art prints cleanly with nothing lost at the edges. It's free for personal use — print it once or print it a dozen times for yourself, your kids, or a classroom, just not for resale or redistribution. And if you'd rather not print at all, this exact picture is also ready to color inside the free Cozy Color by Number app, right from your phone.

Not sure where to start? Here are a few color ideas to bring the lotus flower mandala scene to life, whether you're working on the printed page or coloring it digitally in Cozy Color by Number:

pastel pink lavender soft yellow center mint green cream light coral
Lotus Wheel Mandala — free printable lotus flower mandala coloring page featuring a lotus-inspired mandala with rounded petal layers unfolding from the middle outward

Why you'll like Lotus Wheel Mandala

The picture shows a lotus-inspired mandala with rounded petal layers unfolding from the middle outward, drawn as clean black-and-white line art with no cropping and generous margins. The result is gentle and unhurried, and great for anyone who finds floral, symmetrical patterns soothing. Part of the free Cozy Color by Number printable collection, this coloring page centers on lotus petal layers, circular repetition, delicate petal outlines, and balanced radial design. The linework is designed to print cleanly at full size with no cropping, so every detail comes through on the page. The overall feel is gentle and unhurried, and it works well for great for anyone who finds floral, symmetrical patterns soothing looking for a relaxed, screen-free activity. Once it's printed, it holds up to repeated coloring sessions since the PDF is high resolution. For anyone who wants a faster option, the Cozy Color by Number app lets you color the exact same artwork digitally, tapping numbered sections to fill them with color in a few minutes. In terms of complexity, this one leans detailed, with lots of small repeating shapes — a good pick for anyone who enjoys a slower, more focused coloring session.

A mandala like this one is a great place to try a color-wheel approach: pick two or three colors that sit opposite each other on the wheel (like terracotta and sage, or lilac and gold) and repeat them in rings as you move outward. Working ring by ring instead of section by section tends to keep the pattern feeling balanced, and it's an easy way to turn a few minutes of coloring into a genuinely relaxing, meditative break. Because the design repeats, small color choices multiply outward, so even a simple two- or three-color palette can end up looking surprisingly rich once the whole pattern is filled in. It's also a forgiving format for beginners — if a ring or two doesn't turn out exactly as planned, the overall symmetry of the mandala tends to carry the picture anyway. Many people find repetitive, symmetrical patterns like this one genuinely calming to work through slowly, which is part of why mandalas are such a popular starting point for anyone new to coloring as a way to unwind.

Color It Digitally

Prefer your phone?

If you'd rather color on your phone, the same lotus flower mandala artwork is also available inside Cozy Color by Number, a free paint-by-number app with thousands of pictures across mandalas, animals, flowers, and cozy everyday scenes. Coloring digitally just means tapping each numbered area instead of picking up a pencil, which makes it a quick, mess-free way to relax for a few minutes wherever you are.

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