Floral Violet Coloring Page uses the violet as the basis for a bold graphic design — a floral motif in the tradition of William Morris textiles, Art Deco pattern-making and contemporary surface design. Part of our free flower coloring pages collection, this design is made for colorists who love strong visual impact and see the flower as both botanical subject and pure design element.
The violet has been one of Europe's most poetically cherished wildflowers for centuries. Shakespeare wrote of the "sweet violet" in Twelfth Night and Hamlet, and the flower was associated with faithfulness and modesty across medieval European poetry. During the Victorian era, the sweet violet (Viola odorata) was fashionable as a nosegay flower — small bunches sold by street vendors and worn pinned to lapels or tucked into hair. The violet held extraordinary political significance in 19th-century France: when Napoleon was sent to Elba in 1814, his supporters adopted the violet as his symbol, earning him the nickname "Corporal Violet." Upon his return from Elba the following year, Parisians greeted him throwing violets. The violet became the flower of a revolution.
Violets are exquisitely subtle flowers: the five petals are not uniformly colored but show a radiating pattern of darker "nectar guides" — fine lines or striations that lead pollinators toward the center. The two upper petals are typically the deepest purple; the three lower petals are slightly lighter, often with distinctive dark purple veining on a pale background. For the classic sweet violet, work a deep blue-violet at the petal bases blending to a paler lavender at the edges, then add the fine nectar-guide lines last in a deeper shade. The vivid yellow-orange stamens in the center are a beautiful, tiny accent.
Graphic floral design gives you permission to be bold and decisive in a way that naturalistic illustration does not. Flat areas of strong, saturated color — applied firmly and evenly, without gradation — create the clean aesthetic of textile design, screen printing and digital surface pattern. Use the violet motif as a pure shape first, then decide on your color scheme: two or three colors carefully chosen for maximum impact, applied consistently across the design. The outline is your friend here; trust it to do the work of defining form, so your colors can be applied with freedom and confidence. This graphic floral design is free to download as a print-ready PDF. Bold, colorful and contemporary — a completed page looks spectacular as modern decorative wall art.
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