Ornate Dahlia Coloring Page transforms the dahlia into a richly decorative design element — an ornamental interpretation that draws as much from the traditions of Victorian wallpaper, Art Nouveau pattern and illuminated manuscript as from botanical illustration. Part of our free flower coloring pages collection, this page rewards bold, jewel-toned color with spectacular results.
The dahlia is the national flower of Mexico, where the Aztecs cultivated it for food (the tubers are edible), medicine and decoration. When the Spanish brought dahlias to Europe in the late 18th century, there were attempts to cultivate them as a food crop — but it was as an ornamental flower that the dahlia triumphed. The early 19th century saw the beginning of "dahlia mania": intensive breeding programmes in France, Germany and England produced increasingly spectacular varieties, and dahlia shows became major social events. By 1826, over 200 varieties were in cultivation; today there are over 57,000 registered varieties. The dahlia is named after the Swedish botanist Anders Dahl, a student of Linnaeus — who never knew the extraordinary proliferation his namesake would achieve.
Dahlias offer perhaps the greatest formal variety of any coloring subject: from simple single flowers to elaborate cactus dahlias with spiky quilled petals, waterlily dahlias with broad flat blooms, and dinner-plate dahlias that can exceed 30cm in diameter. The pompom and ball forms — perfect geometric spheres of tightly packed florets — are particularly satisfying to color with a systematic, radial approach. Dahlias are available in every color except blue: the so-called "black" dahlias (like "Karma Choc") are an extraordinary deep chocolate-burgundy that photographs almost black. Bi-colored varieties with distinct zones or tips in contrasting colors offer spectacular coloring possibilities.
Ornate floral designs invite the richest, most ambitious color treatments: jewel tones that would overwhelm a simple botanical illustration work magnificently in a decorative context. Deep sapphire blue, emerald, ruby and amethyst all suit an ornate dahlia treatment. Gold gel pen or metallic pencil used on the decorative border details and accent elements adds a gilded quality that transforms a coloring page into something approaching an illuminated manuscript. Consider the entire page as a unified decorative object rather than a botanical subject; the dahlia is the motif through which a broader aesthetic vision is expressed. This ornate coloring page is completely free to download as a print-ready PDF. A completed page, framed and mounted, makes genuinely beautiful decorative art. Free, always.
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