A fun way to work on fine motor skills and learn more about different fruits and vegetables is with these fun Fruit and Vegetable Tracing Worksheets.
Check out the list of materials that we use with these printables.
Fruit and Vegetable Tracing Worksheets
This printable pack contains a total of thirty-two worksheets that contain a variety of different fruit and vegetables. Children can have fun pronouncing each word and then tracing the picture before they colour it in.
The fruit and vegetables in this pack include:
- Apple – whole
- Apple – inside
- Banana
- Blueberry
- Cherry
- Fig
- Grapes
- Kiwi Fruit
- Lemon
- Orange – whole
- Orange – inside
- Pear
- Plum
- Strawberry
- Watermelon
- Beetroot
- Bell Pepper
- Capsicum
- Broccoli
- Carrot
- Corn
- Cucumber
- Eggplant
- Garlic
- Hot pepper
- Chilli
- Lettuce
- Mushroom
- Onion
- Potato
- Pumpkin
- Tomato
More Tracing Resources
- Dinosaur Tracing Strips
- CVC Tracing Strips
- Alphabet Tracing Worksheets
- Easter Tracing Strips
- Christmas Tracing Strips
- Alphabet Tracing Cards
- Insect Tracing Cards
Ways to Use
- Print out all worksheets and have your child trace the fruit or vegetable and their name before colouring in the pictures with paints, colouring pencils or crayons. Once completed, they could laminate them and hold them together with a binder ring in the top left hand corner.
- Print out all worksheets, laminate them and have your child use a dry erase marker to trace all fruit and vegetables and their names. Hold together with a binder ring in the top left hand corner. Children could colour in the pictures before laminating the pages.
- Print out all worksheets and have your child trace the fruit and vegetables and their names. They can then colour in the pictures with paints, colouring pencils or crayons. Then have your child write the name of the pictures on a separate sheet of paper.
- Print out all worksheets and have your child trace the fruits and vegetables and their names. They can then colour in the pictures with paints, colouring pencils or crayons. Have your child say the sound of each of the beginning letters and then sound out the names of the objects. They can practice writing the names of the pictures on separate pages. These worksheets can be held together with a binder ring in the top left hand corner.
More Fine Motor Resources