Squishmallow Coloring Pages — Free Printable PDFs (Cam, Avery, Connor & Friends)

Free printable Squishmallow coloring pages for kids. Cam the Cat, Avery the Mallard, Connor the Cow — round squishy line art, 8.5×11 PDFs, instant download, no email required.

What’s inside this collection

Three printable Squishmallow coloring pages to start, with more landing every couple of weeks. Every page is hand-drawn line art, sized 8.5×11 at 300 DPI, optimized for crayons, markers, or colored pencils. Pages download instantly — no email signup, no ads, no spam.

Squishmallow is one of the rare toy lines where the toy itself is so visually distinctive that just the silhouette signals “Squishmallow.” That signature round egg-shaped body, the tiny limbs, the simple stitched faces, the flat bottom for self-standing — it’s all there in the line art. A kid sees one of these printed pages and immediately knows what it is, before they’ve recognized which specific Squishmallow character it is.

We built this page because Squishmallow has been the runaway kid toy of the last five years and the existing free coloring pages floating around the web don’t really capture that. Most look like generic stuffed animals. Ours preserve the actual Squishmallow shape language.

The first three — Cam, Avery, Connor

The opening batch covers three of the most-collected original Squishmallow characters.

Why these three Squishmallows first

We didn’t pick these by guessing. Search volume for individual Squishmallow names follows a power law — Cam, Avery, and Connor consistently rank in the top 10 most-searched Squishmallows by name, alongside Stacy the Octopus and Hans the Hedgehog. Shipping the top three first means most kids who land on this page see at least one Squishmallow they already own or want to own.

A second reason: these three cover the three main Squishmallow “categories.” Cam is a cat (the largest animal subcategory), Avery is a bird/duck (the second-largest), and Connor is a farm animal (the third). Between them, the kid who has any Squishmallow at home has a page that fits.

Coming soon — more Squishmallows

This page will grow. Next batch will add Stacy the Octopus (rainbow octopus, hugely popular for ages 5–8), Hans the Hedgehog (brown spiky-back hedgehog), and Caedyn the Unicorn (pink-and-white horned unicorn, the top-requested Squishmallow for kids ages 4–7). After that, we’ll release sea-creature Squishmallows (Beula the Octopus, Patty the Pineapple), dinosaur Squishmallows (the entire dinosaur lineup is hugely collected), and the food-themed lineup (avocados, donuts, ice cream cones).

If there’s a specific Squishmallow your kid owns and wants to color, request it on our Pinterest and we’ll prioritize it. We watch which characters get the most requests and ship those first.

How to print these Squishmallow coloring pages

  1. Click Download on any page above. The PDF opens in a new browser tab.
  2. Print on regular 8.5×11 paper. If your kid colors with markers, switch to cardstock — markers bleed through thin paper.
  3. Color with crayons (forgiving for younger kids), markers (vibrant for ages 5+), or colored pencils (great for older kids who want to do gradient effects).
  4. Hang the finished page on the fridge, or scan it and send it to grandma.

The Squishmallow pages are intentionally simple. Big open shapes, minimal internal detail. This is by design — Squishmallows themselves are simple, soft, friendly toys, and the coloring pages should feel the same way.

Why kids love Squishmallow coloring pages

Squishmallows are one of the rare toy categories that has stayed kid-relevant for nearly a decade. Most toy crazes burn hot for a year and then disappear. Squishmallows hit the market in 2017, exploded during the 2020–2022 collecting frenzy, and have stayed on every kid’s wishlist since.

Part of the reason is that Squishmallows are infinitely collectible without being expensive or fragile. A kid can have one Squishmallow or fifty. The smallest 5” Squishmallows cost a few dollars and fit in a backpack. The bigger 20” Squishmallows are basically furniture. There’s a Squishmallow for every personality — sports themes, food themes, sea creatures, dragons, fairy tale characters, holiday-themed seasonal variants, collab-themed limited drops.

Coloring pages extend that collectibility into the activity space. A kid who already owns ten Squishmallows can sit down and color the line art version of each one — recreating their collection on paper. A kid who doesn’t own Squishmallows can sit down and color the page as a way to imagine which one they’d want for their birthday.

Squishmallows and younger kids

For kids ages 3–6, Squishmallow coloring pages are particularly good because the shapes are so simple. There’s no fine detail to mess up. There’s no anatomy to render — Squishmallows are intentionally rounded and forgiving. A toddler who can barely stay inside a line for a Disney princess page can absolutely fill in Cam the Cat without frustration.

This is one of the few coloring page categories where preschoolers can produce work that genuinely looks good. Encourage them to use big chunky crayons and pick one solid color for the body, then a small second color for the face. The simplicity of the design makes the result look polished even from a 3-year-old.

Squishmallows and older kids

For kids ages 7–10, Squishmallow coloring pages work as a relaxing-detail activity. Older kids can use colored pencils to add gradient shading on Cam’s gray fur (light gray on top, darker gray underneath), shade Avery’s green head from emerald to lime, or fill in each of Connor’s spots with a slightly different texture. The simple base shape becomes a canvas for the kid to add their own artistic detail.

These are also great pages for kids who are starting to collect Squishmallows seriously. Print a coloring page for each Squishmallow the kid owns, color them in the canonical color of the actual plush, and tape them onto a “Squishmallow collection” poster. Some kids treat this like trading-card display.

Make your own custom Squishmallow-style coloring page

Try our AI generator above to make custom Squishmallow-style coloring pages with your kid’s favorite scene:

The generator draws line art in about 10 seconds and outputs a printable PDF. Note: it’s a fan-art tool — outputs are inspired by the Squishmallow shape language but not official Squishmallow art. For personal use only.

Coloring activities and party ideas

Squishmallow-themed quiet-time setup

If you’re a parent of a Squishmallow-obsessed kid, here’s a setup that works well:

  1. A clipboard or hard surface to color on.
  2. The printed coloring page on cardstock.
  3. A 12-pack of crayons for younger kids or a 24-pack of colored pencils for older kids — Squishmallow pages don’t need a lot of color variety to look good.
  4. The actual Squishmallow plush nearby as a color reference, so the kid can match the canonical color of their favorite plush.
  5. Calm music in the background — Squishmallow energy is calm energy, no need for stimulating soundtrack.

Kids will stay engaged with this setup for 20–40 minutes, which is just long enough for a parent to read a chapter, fold a basket of laundry, or finish a cup of coffee.

About these printables

Hand-drawn fan-art line art, optimized for printing on a home printer. Not affiliated with Kelly Toys Holdings, Jazwares, or any official Squishmallow merchandise line. For personal use only — please don’t sell prints or claim them as official Squishmallow merchandise.

Squishmallow is a registered trademark of Kelly Toys Holdings / Jazwares. The line was created in 2017 and has grown into one of the most-collected plush toy lines in history. We’re huge fans. Go check out the official Squishmallow lineup at squishmallows.com.

Why mamaki ships Squishmallow coloring pages

mamaki is built around the kid franchises that parents actually want their kids engaging with — Bluey, Sanrio, KPop Demon Hunters, Bobbie Goods, Labubu, and now Squishmallow. The common thread is good-faith fandom: characters with substance, design quality, and real fan culture, not throwaway licensed-character clip art.

Squishmallow fits naturally because the brand has a real design language that translates beautifully to line art. The egg-shape silhouette, the tiny limbs, the simple embroidered faces — every Squishmallow shares this vocabulary, and once a kid learns to recognize it on paper, they can color any Squishmallow page in the family.

Coloring pages also work as a low-stakes way to enjoy the Squishmallow universe without buying more plush. A family that already owns twenty Squishmallows doesn’t need a twenty-first — but they will absolutely sit down and color a printable of one. It’s the same fandom, expressed at the kitchen table instead of the toy store.

More coloring pages on mamaki

If your kid likes Squishmallow coloring pages, they’ll probably also like:

We’re shipping a new coloring page topic roughly every week. Subscribe via Pinterest or bookmark the homepage to catch new drops.

Questions parents ask

What ages are these Squishmallow coloring pages for?
Designed for kids 3–9. Squishmallows are intentionally round and simple, so the coloring pages have big open areas perfect for crayons and markers — even toddlers can fill in the egg-shaped bodies without going outside the lines.
Are these official Squishmallow coloring pages?
No — these are fan-made hand-drawn line-art pages inspired by Squishmallow characters and not affiliated with Kelly Toys Holdings or Jazwares. For personal use only.
Can I print these on regular paper?
Yes. Each PDF is 8.5×11 inches at 300 DPI — works on any home printer. Cardstock is recommended if your child colors with markers so the ink doesn't bleed through.
Why these three Squishmallows first?
Cam the Cat, Avery the Mallard, and Connor the Cow are three of the most-collected and most-searched-for original Squishmallow characters. Cam is the OG gray tabby that launched the line, Avery is the green duck that went viral on TikTok, and Connor is the classic black-and-white cow that's a kid bedroom staple.
Will you add more Squishmallows?
Yes — this is the first batch of three. Next we'll add more popular Squishmallows like Stacy the Octopus, Hans the Hedgehog, Caedyn the Unicorn, and Beula the Octopus. Bookmark this page or follow our Pinterest to catch new releases.
Can I use these in a classroom or birthday party?
Yes. Free for personal, classroom, library, and home-school use. Squishmallow-themed birthday parties are huge with kids ages 5–10 — print these as activity-table coloring pages.