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Unicorn Feelings Stamps for Toddlers: Color, Cut, and Play

Free unicorn stamp coloring pages for toddlers. Color the silly faces, cut out the circles, and play easy feelings games at home or in class.

By Coloring Magic Art
Ten circular unicorn funny face stamps with happy and surprised expressions for toddlers to color

Most toddlers love unicorns. They are also just learning words for feelings like happy, surprised, sleepy, and grumpy. These unicorn stamp pages put both together: color a round face, cut it out, and talk about how everyone feels.

Each page has ten small circles with a silly unicorn face inside. The lines are bold and simple—good for little crayons and safety scissors. Print one page for a quick afternoon craft, or print all four and keep them in a small “feelings basket” your child can grab anytime.

Download the free PDF

All four pages in one file—ready to print:

Free Unicorn Feelings Stamps PDF (ages 2–5)

Want to make your own version? Copy a prompt from below into the editor, change a few words, and print.

Why kids like stamp pages

Round stamp shapes work really well for ages 2–5:

  • one face per circle—nothing extra in the background
  • big simple shapes kids can color fast
  • ten small cuts per page instead of one big scary picture
  • feelings come up naturally—you laugh, point, and name moods together

Sheet 1: Happy faces

Ten circles in a neat row. Each unicorn looks straight at you with a different silly mood.

Unicorn funny face stamp coloring page printable with happy grin surprised and winky expressions for toddlers
Happy smiles, surprised mouths, winky eyes, and sleepy faces.
Prompt: happy unicorn stamps
Ten small circular stamps, evenly spaced with clear margins, no overlapping. Each circle centered on its own space. Inside each circle: a simple unicorn funny face in front view, cartoon style, minimalist, simplified. Big rounded muzzle, one short horn, two ears, two dot eyes, one curved smile. Vary the expressions across the 10 stamps (happy grin, surprised “O” mouth, winky eye, tongue-out, sleepy eyes), but keep very simple shapes. No other objects between circles, no background details.

Try this: When you are done coloring, ask “Which unicorn is like you right now?” Let your child pick one. Sleepy counts. Silly counts. There is no wrong answer.

Sheet 2: Scattered silly faces

Same idea—ten faces—but the circles are spread out with more space between them. Easier to cut, and it looks like a sticker sheet on the table.

Unicorn face stamp coloring page printable with cheek puff and lopsided smile for preschool kids
Raised eyebrows, puffy cheeks, and crooked smiles.
Prompt: scattered silly stamps
Ten small circular stamps, grouped in a balanced scattered arrangement with wide margins between circles, no overlapping. In each circle: a simple unicorn funny face, close-up front view, whimsical cartoon style, minimalist, simplified. Add one easy feature variation per stamp (one raised eyebrow, cheek puff, tiny round nostrils, tiny tooth showing, lopsided smile), keeping faces bold and uncluttered. No other objects between circles and no background details.

Try this: Hide three stamps in the room. When your child finds them, sort into “makes me laugh” and “makes me think.” No flashcards needed.

Sheet 3: More kinds of feelings

These unicorns turn a little to the side. You get grins, pouts, giggles, shocked faces, and confused faces—not just happy or sad.

Unicorn face stamp coloring page printable in three-quarter view with grin pout and confused expressions
Lots of moods—pout, giggle, shocked, confused—all with simple shapes.
Prompt: feelings range stamps
Ten small circular stamps, evenly spaced with consistent margin around each circle, no overlapping images. Each circle contains a unicorn funny face in three-quarter view (slight turn), simplified cartoon style, minimalist. One small horn, two ears, dot eyes (one can wink), small rounded snout, simple mouth shapes. Make each of the 10 expressions different (grin, pout, giggle, shocked, confused) using only a few large shapes. No other objects between circles, no background details.

Try this: Put two stamps side by side and make up a tiny story. “This unicorn wanted the last cookie. This one is surprised!” Kids often show feelings through play before they have the words.

Sheet 4: Silly tough faces

The last page has playful “tough” looks—little frowns, serious eyebrows, puffy cheeks. Still round, still friendly, still fun.

Unicorn face stamp coloring page printable with determined eyebrows and playful tough funny faces for kids
Serious eyebrows and scrunched noses—but still silly and sweet.
Prompt: tough funny stamps
Ten small circular stamps, neatly spaced with clear gaps, no overlap. Inside each circle: a unicorn funny face in front view, very simple and playful, minimalist cartoon style. Include a mix of “tough” but funny expressions (tiny frown, determined eyebrows, puffed cheeks, scrunched nose) while keeping features large and simple: one horn, two ears, two dot eyes, one mouth line or simple shape. No other objects between circles, no background details.

Try this: Make a “brave unicorn” badge. Color one stamp, cut it out, tape it to a shirt or a stick. Pull it out when your child tries something new—new shoes, potty time, saying hello to a friend.

Color, cut, play

No fancy setup needed. This works on the kitchen table, on the floor, or in a classroom corner.

1. Color (about 5–10 minutes)

  • Start with three crayons. Too many colors can slow little kids down.
  • Talk as you go: “This sleepy one could be purple.”
  • Scribbles are fine. You can still tell it is a face.

2. Cut (with help)

  • For ages 2–3, an adult can cut around the circles first.
  • Ages 4–5 can try the round edges with safety scissors.
  • Cut one circle at a time so nobody gets frustrated.
  • Tape a stamp to thicker paper if it is easier to hold.

3. Play

Pick one game a day:

GameHow to play
Feelings pickLay stamps face-up. Say “Show me excited!” and let your child pick one.
Mirror faceHold up a stamp. Copy the face together in a mirror.
Story stickTape stamps to popsicle sticks. Act out a little scene at snack time.
Calm-down jarPut stamps in a clear jar. Shake, pick one, take a breath, name the feeling.
Class check-inEach child puts one stamp on a board: “How I feel today.”

Same idea as a feelings song or a picture book—little kids learn by doing it again and again.

A few tips

  • Thicker paper holds up better when kids cut and play.
  • Laminate favorites if you want them to last all month.
  • Read a book about feelings first, then use the stamps as the characters.
  • Keep an extra uncut copy to reprint when scissors win.

Too many circles on a page? In the editor, ask for bigger circles or fewer stamps per sheet.

Make your own

Copy any prompt above and change a few words:

  • swap “unicorn” for “puppy” or “dinosaur”
  • add “extra large circles” if cutting is still hard
  • ask for “only happy and calm faces” for a gentler start

Then:

  1. Open the editor and pick ages 2–5 (kids-simple).
  2. Paste a prompt from above.
  3. Check the prompts before you generate.
  4. Print, color, cut, and toss them in your feelings basket.

Ready to try this idea?

Open the editor and adapt the prompt for your next coloring book page.

Start your own stamp book

That’s it

Color the circles. Cut them out. Let your child hold a happy unicorn or a grumpy one while you talk about feelings together. When you want new faces, copy a prompt into the editor and print another sheet.

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