Free download
PDF + PNG
Color guide
Preview included
Faith activity
Home or Sunday school
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden
Free printable Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden coloring page for kids. A faith-filled Bible Stories design perfect for Sunday school, family devotion, and quiet time. Download and print for free.
Free • PDF / PNG • Letter size • Print-ready
Printable coloring page details
- Format
- PDF and PNG
- Paper size
- US Letter and A4
- Best for
- Sunday school, homeschool, quiet time
- Use
- Personal, family, classroom, church


Personalized keepsake
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Create a custom page from your child's photo. Each personalized page includes printable line art and a soft color example.
Create My Child's PageAbout this coloring page
A peaceful garden scene fills this page, with Adam and Eve standing together near a tree heavy with fruit. Around them are the kinds of details that make this story so memorable — a deer drinking from a small stream, birds in the branches, butterflies in the air, and a snake coiled around the trunk of the central tree, partly hidden in the leaves. There's no chaos in the picture; the moment shown is before the fall, when everything in the garden was still good. The variety of plants and animals gives kids a lot to work with, and the snake is small enough that you can decide as a teacher how much attention to draw to it.
Suggested Scripture: Genesis 2:15 (NIV) — The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it.
The page is designed as a printable Christian coloring activity that can support a short Bible conversation, a family devotional moment, or a calm classroom activity.


Create a personalized Jesus coloring page
Want a coloring page with your child in a Bible-inspired scene? Upload a reference photo, choose a scene, and download a print-ready PDF plus HD PNG.
Create a personalized Jesus coloring pageTeaching ideas for parents and teachers
- Before coloring, ask kids to find every animal on the page. There are usually more than they expect — it sets up the idea that creation was full of life.
- For ages 5–7: focus on the joy part of the story first, not the fall. Ask, "What do you think Adam and Eve did all day in the garden?"
- For Sunday school: the snake is on the page but small. Use this to talk about how temptation usually doesn't look obvious at first. Ask, "Where do you have to look to find the snake? What does that mean for us?"
- For family devotion: read Genesis 2 (not 3 yet) and just talk about what God made and called good. Save the fall for the next session — this page works for the "before" story.
Print and activity tips
- Color the leaves on the central tree last, in slightly darker green than the rest of the garden — it makes the tree stand out without being scary.
- Add small fruits to other trees in the background using just dots of red or yellow — kids love this and it makes the garden feel abundant.
- Leave the snake uncolored on purpose, then come back to it during a follow-up lesson about Genesis 3.
Discussion questions
- What's the most peaceful place you've ever been to? Could it have been like this garden?
- Adam's job in the garden was to take care of it. What do you think it means to "take care of" something God made?
- Why do you think God put a tree they couldn't eat from in such a perfect place?
- If you could name any animal in the world, which one would you name first?
- Adam and Eve walked with God in the garden. What do you think those walks were like?



