5 Hut Coloring Pages - Free!
Buildings
What do you think of the hut we have colored? We thought warm tones would suit it wonderfully! Who do you think lives inside? Can you imagine some mischievous little natives or some dedicated sheep herders? Consider that it could even be the home of the chiefs of a hunting tribe!
At Coloring Together you have at your disposal thousands of beautiful pages to print and color. Select the themed gallery you like best and get ready to discover all the incredible coloring pages we have for you!
This time we have decided to put together a lovely gallery of hut coloring pages, native hut drawings, and indigenous hut drawings. Have fun painting these charming little huts with all kinds of colors, techniques, and materials!
While we color together you can learn a ton of new things. Each one of our hut coloring pictures is accompanied by a super interesting fun fact. Read them all and discover some of the secrets these huts hide under their thatched roofs!
If you want everyone to see what a good artist you are, don't miss the chance to send us your best colored drawings! We use them to upload to our website and inspire those who follow us to let themselves be carried away by the amazing world of art. Make your artistic skills a motivation for others!
Have you already decided what materials you will work with? It occurs to us that you could use small strands of straw and a bit of glue to fill in the empty spaces of your hut. Any material is good for making your drawing stand out, and when it comes to realism, we think straw would be an excellent option!
Huts coloring pages
Why color pictures of huts?
Despite their simplicity, huts have an important historical, architectural, and social value. They are defined as simple and primitive buildings constructed from rocks, branches, mud, clay, dry leaves, wooden boards, animal skins, or any other available material.
They are important because they represent one of the first steps humanity took to settle in sedentary communities. A hut meant that the people who built it were going to stay in that place for a considerable period of time.
Populations all over the world began to give them their personal touches and to build them according to their needs and possibilities. This is why the huts of Native Americans are very different from the huts in which members of African tribes live.
Since at Coloring Together we care about you learning many new things, we have complemented each of our hut coloring pages with a super interesting fun fact about these modest and peculiar little houses. Take a minute to read them all and become a hut expert!
Are you ready to start? Then run to get a few white sheets to print the hut pictures you liked most! Clear your work space, bring your art materials, and give your 100% when coloring these beautiful drawings. Turn these huts into true works of art!
Learn while coloring Huts
- The oldest hut in the world was built 11 thousand years ago! In 2010 a group of English researchers discovered its ruins in Scarborough, in the northeast of England.
- The “over the water” huts are one of the main tourist attractions of the island of Bora Bora. They consist of modern and cozy huts built over islets near the beaches. Imagine that when you wake up and look out your window, you see the ocean right beneath your feet!
- Did you know that in Spanish, the word “hut” translates to “choza”? This means that the name of the famous restaurant chain “Pizza Hut” could be translated into Spanish as “Choza de Pizza.”
- There are many words you can use to name a hut! Depending on the country we are in, huts can be called chozos, cabañas, chabolas, bohíos, ranchos, ocas, rucas, teitos, or rondavels.
- Did you know that in Spain there are between 147 and 170 people with the last name “Choza”? In Mexico the number is estimated at 1,125 people and in Peru, at 142 people. Do you know anyone with this curious last name?
