
Ruffnut and Tuffnut are in the house and the twins are already arguing about who looks cooler on your page, which means it is the perfect time to color, paint, print, and draw like a pro. This printable from Imprimivel dot com brings the funniest duo in Berk to your table so you can choose the colors, set the vibe, and turn their wild energy into a super bright masterpiece. Just pick your pencils, markers, or paint, hit print, and let your imagination run as fast as a dragon in the open sky.
If you know How to Train Your Dragon, you know these two never stop. One minute they are bragging, the next they are daring each other to try something even crazier. That makes them awesome for a coloring page because you can push the style as far as you want. Try a bold armor for Ruffnut, a shiny helmet for Tuffnut, and a dramatic shadow under their boots. Add sparks around their dragon Barf and Belch or draw a windy cliff with tiny houses from Berk in the distance. Coloring this scene is like directing a mini movie where you choose the costumes and the lighting and the background. It feels epic and it is totally yours.
Printing is easy peasy. Click, print, and you are ready to paint. Made a mistake while coloring the hair or the dragon scales. No drama. Print another page and test a new combo. Parents love this because it keeps kids focused and happy while practicing pencil control, patience, and color sense. Kids love it because the twins are pure chaos in the best way and they look awesome when you pump up the contrast with deep blues, hot reds, or a fresh splash of neon. You can color softly for a pastel look or go full power with thick strokes and bright layers. Both work. Both look great.
Want to level up. Build a whole scene around them. Draw smoke trails in the sky, floating embers from the dragon breath, and a secret sign that points to the training arena. Add Toothless passing by with Hiccup and give Astrid a cameo at the edge of the page, cheering or rolling her eyes at the twins being extra. You can even write tiny speech bubbles and invent a quick joke that matches the colors you chose. That little storytelling touch makes your drawing feel alive and turns a simple coloring activity into a keepsake worth saving.
Here is a fun challenge that kids love. Print two copies. On the first one, color Ruffnut with cool tones and Tuffnut with warm tones. On the second one, switch it. Compare the mood of each version and pick your favorite. Another idea is to paint the background first with very light crayon or watercolor, let it dry, and only then color the characters. That trick makes the twins pop and gives the page a nice depth without any fancy tools. If you have glitter glue or metallic pens, add tiny glints on the helmets and the dragon harness. Bling that fits Berk. Yes, that is a thing.
Parents, this printable is also a sneaky helper for calm time. Turn on a playlist with soft movie scores, set the table with crayons and markers, and ask the kids to color while telling the story of what is happening in the scene. Who challenged who. Where are they going. What color is the sky when dragons race at sunset. Talking while drawing builds language and imagination in a chill way. When the page is done, snap a photo and make a little gallery at home. Next time, print again and try a new theme like night flight colors or festival colors or winter in Berk.
Do not stop at the twins. Imprimivel dot com has more How to Train Your Dragon friends waiting to join your folder. Color Toothless with glossy black and a tiny sparkle in the eye. Paint Astrid with brave blues. Draw Hiccup planning the next adventure. Each printable is made to be easy to print at home and fun to color with whatever you already have on the desk. The more you color, the more your hand learns new tricks, and the cooler your pages look on the wall or inside your sketchbook.
Ready to start. Print the Ruffnut and Tuffnut coloring page right now and jump into a world where you call the shots. Choose your palette, draw your background, paint your highlights, and color those helmets with the swagger they deserve. When you finish, show it off, gift it to a friend, or tape it near your study space for instant dragon vibes. The twins are loud, the colors are bright, and your creativity is about to fly.

At just five years old, Gustavo turned a simple wish to print coloring pages into an idea that now inspires children in more than 150 countries.
That is how Imprimivel.com was born, a project created side by side with his dad, Jean Bernardo, to spread color, imagination and joy in 10 languages, reaching a potential audience of over 800 million children around the world.
Today, Gustavo is in charge of helping choose the content, picking themes and characters with excitement, always thinking about what will make other kids smile, while his dad takes care of the editing and turns the boy’s ideas into reality.
