Barbie: Coloring

So the next time you see a Coloring Barbie book—dusty on a thrift store shelf or trending on a tablet—don’t walk past. Pick up a crayon. Color her hair green. Give her combat boots. Put a rocket ship behind her Dreamhouse. Because the most powerful word in the Barbie lexicon isn’t “Malibu” or “Doctor” or “President.” It’s the word you whisper when you choose a color no one told you to choose.

In a world of pre-filtered photos and AI-generated art, the slow, deliberate, imperfect act of coloring remains radically human. The hand cramps. The crayon breaks. The pink goes outside the lip line. And that is exactly the point. coloring barbie

Perhaps the future is hybrid. A 2023 study from the University of Tokyo found that children who colored Barbie first on paper, then scanned and digitally animated their work, showed a 40% increase in narrative storytelling ability. They didn’t just color Barbie; they wrote her next scene. Let’s not shy away from the hard conversation. Barbie has been criticized for decades as a symbol of unattainable body image and limited diversity. But coloring offers a unique rebuttal. When a Black child colors Barbie’s skin brown, gives her afro puffs, and dresses her in a kente cloth pattern—that child is not consuming a stereotype. They are correcting a canon . So the next time you see a Coloring

Word count: ~1,250 | Feature length: Long-form Give her combat boots

In 2020, the grassroots movement #ColorBarbieInclusive went viral on Instagram. Artists posted their “re-colored” Barbies: a Barbie with a mastectomy scar, a Barbie in a wheelchair ramp Dreamhouse, a Barbie with vitiligo. Mattel took note. The following year, the official Barbie Color & Create series included blank face templates so children could draw any eye shape, any skin tone, any expression.