Hair History Coloring Pages: Explore Cultural Hairstyles

Your 5-year-old just asked why her friend's braids look different from her ponytail. Or your second-grader walked home curious about why his classmate's hair is wrapped in a bright cloth. Hair is one of the first ways kids notice human diversity, and cultural hairstyles coloring pages turn that curiosity into a screen-free, hands-on conversation starter.
World Hairstyles Coloring Pages for Kids
Every culture in human history has shaped, decorated, or styled hair in ways that signal identity, community, or status. West African cornrows carry centuries of tradition. Japanese Shimada hairstyles marked social class in the Edo period. Viking braids kept warriors' hair battle-ready. Māori topknots honored ancestors. A coloring page labeled "traditional Yoruba threading" or "Qing dynasty queue" gives kids a visual anchor for the story behind the style.
We keep the pages simple enough for a 4-year-old to color but detailed enough that the pattern matters. Thick outlines, clear sections, no tiny tangles. One hairstyle per page, captioned with the culture and a one-sentence context note parents can read aloud. "Fulani braids, West Africa, often decorated with beads and cowrie shells." That's the whole lesson.
Traditional Hairstyles Around the World Coloring
Kids grasp abstract ideas when they see the specific version first. A page showing a Heian-era Japanese court hairstyle next to a modern pixie cut from the same country shows change over time in one culture. A set comparing braided styles across continents (Senegalese twists, Dutch braids, French plaits, Indigenous two-strand twists) shows shared techniques with regional twists.
Teachers tell us they pair these with a world map. Color the page, find the country, stick a pin in it. By the end of the unit, the map is full and the kids can name three hairstyles they'd never heard of before. (We once had a teacher email that her class now greets new students by asking what hairstyles are common where their family comes from. Small win, but it counts.)
Hairstyle History Coloring Sheets
Hairstyles shift when cultures meet, when tools change, when laws restrict or protect them. Ancient Egyptian wigs signaled wealth. The 1920s bob was a gender-politics earthquake. The Afro of the 1960s and 70s was resistance and pride made visible. A coloring page of a Gibson Girl updo from 1900 next to a flapper bob from 1925 shows a revolution in 25 years.
We're not writing a PhD thesis on each page. The caption gives the era, the region, and one reason the style mattered. "Victory rolls, 1940s United States and Britain, inspired by aircraft propellers during World War II." The kid colors it in, the parent reads it aloud, the dinner-table conversation happens later.
How to Teach Kids About Cultural Hairstyles
Start with the kid's own hair. What does it do? How do they (or you) style it? Then show a page that looks different and explain why. "In some places, long hair is kept in wraps to protect it. In others, certain braids show which family you belong to. In others, cutting hair marks a big life event." Keep it concrete, skip the lecture.
Pair the coloring with a question. "Why do you think people braid hair?" (Keeps it tidy, looks beautiful, lasts a long time, signals something important.) "What do you think this style would feel like to wear?" (Heavy, cool, fancy, hard to sleep in.) The coloring page is the object lesson, not the whole lesson.
For older kids (ages 7 and up), add a research step. Pick a hairstyle from the page, find one photo of a real person wearing it, write two sentences about what you learned. Boom, social studies meets art meets literacy. For the 4-year-olds, the goal is simpler: color it, hear the name, remember people everywhere care about their hair.
Why Do Different Cultures Have Different Hairstyles?
Climate, tools, religion, status, rebellion. In hot regions, people kept hair off the neck or shaved it short. In cold regions, long hair was insulation. Scissors, combs, oils, dyes, and decorations shaped what was possible. Laws in colonial and enslaved contexts banned or erased traditional styles, so reclaiming them later became an act of identity. Hair is never just hair.
A coloring page won't cover all that, but it opens the door. The 6-year-old coloring a Sikhs' uncut kesa under a turban might ask why it's never cut. That's the parent or teacher's cue to explain religious practice in one sentence the kid can hold onto. The page itself is the conversation starter, the visual proof that the world is wider than one mirror.
Cultural Hairstyle Coloring Printables
Print a set on Sunday, keep them in the folder by the door, pull one out when the question comes up. Or rotate them through quiet time at school. Or build a unit: one hairstyle per week, map it, research it, invite a family member to talk about their own hair tradition if they want to share.
We keep the file simple so it prints clearly on any home printer. Black outlines, white background, labeled caption at the bottom. The kid colors, cuts it out if they want, sticks it in a binder. By the end of term, they've got a collection that looks like the actual diverse world they live in.
If your kid's current obsession is "why does everyone look different," printable cultural hairstyle pages give you a tangible, screen-free answer they can color in themselves. (Type what you're curious about and the page appears in about two minutes, we've seen requests for everything from 1800s Gibson Girl hair to modern locs.)
Sophie Chen
Child Development Specialist
Sophie is a child psychologist with over 15 years of experience in early childhood development and creative education.


