If you’ve cracked a booster of Kayou’s My Little Pony TCG, you know the ER cards are different. They’re not character portraits. They’re places. Sweet Apple Acres at golden hour. The stairs of Cloudsdale climbing into the sky. The library tree where Twilight reads herself to sleep. Every time I pulled one, the same thought:
“This would make a perfect coloring page.”
So I emailed Jessica at Kayou.












The “yes” I wasn’t expecting
Jessica got it instantly. A few days later, a folder of high-resolution source files landed in my inbox, and I cleared a weekend to turn them into coloring sheets — clean line art, full size, ready for crayons.
What you’re getting
Twelve sheets, one for every ER scene across Friendships Begin and Fantasy Wonderland.
The first six come from the Friendships Begin starter decks — the homes of the Mane 6:
- Golden Oak Library — Twilight Sparkle’s tree library in Ponyville
- Fluttershy’s Cottage
- Sugarcube Corner — Pinkie Pie’s home, and Ponyville’s bakery
- Sweet Apple Acres — the Apple family farm
- Cloudominium — Rainbow Dash’s cloud house
- Carousel Boutique — Rarity’s dress shop
The next six come from Fantasy Wonderland booster packs — wider shots of the Equestria around those homes:
- Canterlot Tower
- Ponyville Suburb
- Ponyville Street
- Road at Sweet Apple Acres
- Stairs of Cloudsdale
- Manehattan Streets
Together, the twelve sheets cover almost every postcard-worthy view in Equestria.
Why locations color so well
Single-character coloring pages are great. Locations are better. Each ER scene gives you half a dozen surfaces to play with — leaves, clouds, brick, glass, fabric, sky — instead of just a coat and a mane. You can spend twenty minutes on one corner of Sugarcube Corner’s awning and feel like you’ve gone somewhere.
Stripping the color out of these scenes turned out to be the cleanest way to expose the linework underneath. The same instincts that make these cards chase-worthy on a binder page make them deeply satisfying to fill in with pencils.
Who I made these for
Both, really. I had two audiences in mind the whole time.
Kids who already love the cards. If your nine-year-old has been begging you to keep buying boosters, here’s a way to extend the magic without a single additional pack. Print a few sheets, dump out the colored pencils, and you’ve bought yourself an afternoon. Bonus: the activity quietly teaches them what each ER actually looks like, which is half the fun of chasing them later.
Adult collectors who color now. I see you. Adult coloring is not a phase. There is something deeply satisfying about sitting down with the Stairs of Cloudsdale and deciding, finally, what shade those clouds should actually be.
A few printing notes
The sheets are built for letter (8.5×11) and A4. If your printer takes cardstock, that’s the move — markers won’t bleed and the lines stay sharp. Plain copy paper works fine with pencils or crayons. Want to laminate a favorite and reuse it with dry-erase markers? The artwork is rendered at high enough resolution to survive that. Don’t ask me how I know.
Download the pack
Hit the button below to grab all twelve sheets in a single zip — both Friendships Begin and Fantasy Wonderland, no email gate, no catch. If you make something with them, I’d love to see it. Tag me when you post.
