What Makes Big Hero 6 So Colorable
Big Hero 6 hit theaters in 2014 and immediately stood out for one reason: Baymax. That inflatable healthcare robot — round, white, and almost aggressively soft-looking — is one of the most visually distinctive characters Disney has ever produced. His suit upgrades to red-and-purple armor mid-movie, which gives colorists something to work with beyond plain white. Hiro Hamada, the teenage robotics prodigy at the center of the story, wears deep navy and red, while the rest of Team Baymax (Honey Lemon, Go Go, Wasabi, and Fred) each have their own color-coded suits that make them easy to identify on the page.
The setting — a fictional city called San Fransokyo — blends San Francisco's hilly streets with Tokyo's neon-lit density. That mashup shows up in background scenes: kanji signage, cable car wires, and cherry blossoms next to Victorian row houses. It's a genuinely unusual visual world, and coloring pages that capture it give fans something more interesting than a plain character portrait.
What's in the Collection on Worksheetzone
The Big Hero 6 coloring pages on Worksheetzone include single-character portraits of Baymax in both his soft vinyl form and his armored suit — two very different coloring experiences. There are also group scenes with the full six-person team, action poses mid-flight, and a few pages focused specifically on Hiro and Baymax's friendship, which is really the emotional heart of the film. Styles range from clean, simple outlines that younger kids can fill in quickly to more detailed line-art with panel shading and mechanical texture on the suits.
Difficulty varies enough that a seven-year-old and a teenage fan can both find something that fits. The simpler Baymax portraits are especially approachable — his shape is basically circles, which means even kids who get frustrated with complex outlines will feel successful.
Who Uses These and How
Parents whose kids are cycling through a Big Hero 6 phase will find these pages useful as a rainy-day activity that doesn't require a screen. Teachers have used character sheets at art stations during movie-themed weeks or end-of-term free periods. Fans of the Disney animated series — which expanded the movie's story — often use the pages for fan art practice, especially for Honey Lemon and Go Go who get more screen time in the show.
On Worksheetzone, every visitor can download one page free per day without creating an account. After that first download, logging in lets you grab watermarked copies at no charge. A membership starting at $0.99/week removes watermarks entirely if you're printing a batch for a classroom or birthday party.
Coloring Tips for Big Hero 6 Pages
Baymax's armor is officially a deep maroon-red with purple undertones — closer to crimson than fire-engine red. Using a cool-toned red marker or pencil, then adding a thin layer of purple in the shadow areas, gets you much closer to the film's actual palette than plain red alone. Metallic silver or light gray works well for the suit joints and Hiro's helmet visor.
For San Fransokyo backgrounds, try layering warm amber and gold tones for the city lights, with a blue-to-purple gradient in the sky — it captures the movie's night scenes better than solid black. Honey Lemon's color palette is pastel pink and yellow, which blends beautifully with colored pencils rather than markers if you want a softer finish. Go Go's suit is charcoal and yellow — high contrast, and it looks sharp even with basic supplies.
Frequently Asked Questions
What colors are used for Baymax's armor in the movie?
Baymax's battle suit is a deep crimson-red with purple-tinted shadows and charcoal gray accents at the joints. His base form — before the armor — is plain white with black eyes. For the most accurate result, avoid bright orange-red and go for a cooler, darker red with a hint of purple in the shaded areas.
Are these Big Hero 6 coloring pages suitable for young kids?
Most of the collection works well for kids ages 4 and up. The simpler Baymax outlines have minimal interior detail, so younger kids can color confidently without getting lost in small sections. The more detailed group scenes and action poses are better suited to kids 8 and older, or adults who want a more involved coloring session.
Can I print multiple Big Hero 6 pages in one visit?
On Worksheetzone, one page downloads free per day without any account needed. If you need more, logging in gives you access to watermarked downloads at no cost. For printing a full set — say, for a classroom or party — a Worksheetzone membership starting at $0.99/week lets you download clean, watermark-free versions in bulk.