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.
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.

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.
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.
Round stamp shapes work really well for ages 2–5:
Ten circles in a neat row. Each unicorn looks straight at you with a different silly mood.

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.
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.

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

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

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.
No fancy setup needed. This works on the kitchen table, on the floor, or in a classroom corner.
Pick one game a day:
| Game | How to play |
|---|---|
| Feelings pick | Lay stamps face-up. Say “Show me excited!” and let your child pick one. |
| Mirror face | Hold up a stamp. Copy the face together in a mirror. |
| Story stick | Tape stamps to popsicle sticks. Act out a little scene at snack time. |
| Calm-down jar | Put stamps in a clear jar. Shake, pick one, take a breath, name the feeling. |
| Class check-in | Each 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.
Too many circles on a page? In the editor, ask for bigger circles or fewer stamps per sheet.
Copy any prompt above and change a few words:
Then:
kids-simple).Ready to try this idea?
Open the editor and adapt the prompt for your next coloring book page.
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.