Satoru Gojo's Look on the Page
Satoru Gojo is built for coloring. His stark white hair, near-black uniform, and trademark black blindfold create a high-contrast composition that works well in pencil and marker alike. When his blindfold comes off, the luminous teal-blue Six Eyes become the natural focal point — a vivid accent against an otherwise dark palette. These Gojo coloring pages cover a range of poses — relaxed classroom stances, arms-crossed teacher moments, and intense battle compositions channeling Infinity and Hollow Purple.
Scenes draw from recognizable story moments: his floating Domain Expansion entry, the sunglasses-on street look from off-duty sequences, and close-ups of his uncovered eyes — each offering a different mood and challenge level.
Color Picks and Technique Tips
Gojo's hair reads as cool white, not warm or silver — leave most of it unshaded and use pale blue-gray only in shadow areas. For the uniform, deep charcoal or dark navy preserves fabric folds better than pure black, which flattens crease lines and loses detail. The Six Eyes deserve the most attention: layer a bright cerulean or electric teal at the iris and fade to ice blue at the edges. Markers handle this well — Copic B04 over a B000 base gives a glowing gradient without muddiness.
Domain Expansion backgrounds (Unlimited Void) reward colored pencil burnishing: deep navy and black layered with thin white streaks suggest the infinite, starless space of the technique.
Who These Sheets Work Best For
Jujutsu Kaisen has fans across multiple age groups, and the Gojo coloring pages on Worksheetzone reflect that range. Portrait-style sheets with bold outlines suit fans ages 8 and up, while fine-line action scenes and Domain Expansion compositions are better matched to teens and adults who want a longer, more detailed session.
- Ages 8–12: single-character portraits with clean lines and minimal background
- Ages 13–17: action poses with moderate shading and costume detail
- Adults: full-scene compositions including Unlimited Void and cursed energy effects
Frequently Asked Questions
What colors work best for Gojo's Six Eyes?
Electric teal or cerulean works best for the iris, fading to pale ice blue at the outer edges. Standard blue reads too flat for the character's supernatural look.
Are these pages suitable for younger kids?
Clean portrait-style sheets are manageable for kids around 8 and up who already know the character. Action scenes with dense backgrounds are better suited to teens and adults with more experience coloring detailed linework.
What paper and print settings give the clearest results?
65 lb cardstock holds marker and colored pencil significantly better than copy paper, reducing bleed-through on detailed lines. Print in black-and-white at the highest quality setting for the sharpest line art.
Why does Gojo wear a blindfold if his Six Eyes already give him superior perception?
In Jujutsu Kaisen lore, the Six Eyes process cursed energy at such fine resolution that constant unfiltered use would overwhelm the brain — the blindfold dials down that input to a manageable level. Even fully covered, Gojo perceives his surroundings through cursed energy alone, so the blindfold removes no tactical ability while protecting his focus and preventing opponents from reading his gaze during a fight.