Every champion’s story ends with the trophy held high, and our soccer trophy coloring pages let kids color that winning moment again and again. Each picture is free to print as a PDF or to color online.
Color gleaming cups wrapped in laurel and ribbons, winners’ podiums stacked with medals, a trophy ceremony with the announcer, and whole teams parading the cup on an open-top bus. They make a great reward for a young player after a big game — or a fun way to dream about lifting silverware one day.
Color the Champions’ Cup: Make a Trophy That Really Shines!
A trophy picture is all about shine—a golden or silver cup, a sturdy base, colorful ribbons, and maybe confetti raining down. Coloring it well makes the prize look bright, polished, and worth celebrating. Leave a few small white spots for the shiny reflections.
What to Watch for While Coloring a Trophy
- Gold or silver: color the cup in gold (yellow with a little brown) or silver (light gray). Leave tiny white spots so it looks like shiny metal.
- The shine: add a slightly darker edge on one side and keep the other side lighter—metal looks round and polished that way.
- The handles: color them the same as the cup so they look like one piece of metal.
- The base: a dark base (black, brown, or deep green) makes the gold cup pop.
- Ribbons: use the team’s colors for the ribbons tied to the handles.
- Confetti: tiny dots of many bright colors around the cup make it feel like a celebration.
- The name plate: leave the little plate light so it looks like engraved metal.
Helpful hint: for shiny metal, color most of the cup evenly, then leave 2–3 small white spots uncolored—those bright spots are what make it look polished.
Realistic Trophy Colors (With Easy Color Hints)
These are common, realistic colors for a shiny cup or trophy. Use the table for the metal and the base, then add the ribbons and confetti.
| Trophy Part | Realistic Color | Color Hint |
|---|---|---|
| Gold cup | Golden yellow | #FFC107 |
| Gold shadow | Deep gold | #B8860B |
| Silver cup | Light gray | #BDBDBD |
| Silver shadow | Gray | #757575 |
| Bright shine | White | #FFFFFF |
| Trophy base | Dark wood | #4E342E |
| Deep-green base | Malachite green | #1B5E20 |
| Ribbon | Team red | #D32F2F |
| Ribbon | Team blue | #1976D2 |
| Name plate | Pale gold | #FFE082 |
| Confetti | Red | #E53935 |
| Confetti | Blue | #1976D2 |
| Confetti | Yellow | #FBC02D |
| Confetti | Green | #43A047 |
Simple Steps for a Neat, Realistic Finish
- Color the whole cup evenly in gold or silver.
- Add a darker edge down one side, and leave 2–3 white spots for the shine.
- Color the base in a dark color so the metal stands out.
- Finish with ribbons in team colors and a few confetti dots around the cup.
Quick check: when the cup has both bright spots and darker edges, it stops looking flat and starts looking like real, shiny metal.
Scissors, Glue, Champions! Make Your Own Trophy
Shiny Foil Cup Trophy
✂️ You need: a paper or plastic cup, aluminum foil, cardboard, glue or tape, scissors
- Wrap a cup all over with aluminum foil so it looks like shiny metal.
- Cut two handle shapes from cardboard, wrap them in foil, and tape one to each side.
- Glue the cup upside-down onto a small cardboard base so your trophy stands up.
💡 Supports: fine motor skills, planning, pride in finishing
Champion’s Medal
✂️ You need: cardboard, gold or yellow paper (or foil), a ribbon or string, scissors, glue, a marker
- Cut a circle from cardboard and cover it with gold paper or foil.
- Draw a big number 1 or a star in the middle.
- Punch a hole at the top, thread a ribbon through, and wear your medal.
💡 Supports: hand-eye coordination, creativity, self-confidence
Victory Rosette
✂️ You need: colored paper, scissors, glue, two ribbon strips in your team colors
- Fold a long strip of paper back and forth like a fan, then glue the ends into a circle.
- Glue two ribbon tails to the back so they hang down.
- Stick a small colored circle in the middle and write your team’s number or initial on it.
💡 Supports: patience, folding skills, team spirit
Did You Know? 5 Amazing Facts About Soccer Cups and Trophies
The Oldest Cup of All
The FA Cup, first played in 1871–72, is the oldest football competition in the world. The FA
A Golden Sculpture
The FIFA World Cup trophy is a gold sculpture of two human figures holding up the globe. Encyclopædia Britannica
Europe’s Top Club Prize
The European Cup was renamed the UEFA Champions League in 1992; Real Madrid, with 15 titles, is its most successful club. Encyclopædia Britannica
England’s Home Win
England hosted the 1966 World Cup and beat West Germany 4–2 after extra time to win its first title. Encyclopædia Britannica
The World Cup’s Top Scorer
Brazil’s Marta is the all-time top scorer at World Cups (men’s or women’s) with 17 goals. Encyclopædia Britannica