Can You Use Clipart in Children’s Books & Story PDFs? (Interior Pages, Covers & Activity Books)
📖 Introduction
Children’s books, cozy story PDFs, coloring pages, and classroom printables are some of the sweetest ways to use digital clipart. With the right artwork, you can turn a simple page into a whole little world that kids want to step into.
But then the worried thought appears: “Am I actually allowed to use clipart in my children’s book?” What about activity pages, KDP books, or downloadable story PDFs for your class?
This guide walks through when clipart is okay in kids’ books and activity pages, what becomes risky, and how WondersArtist licensing fits in. It is written for crafters, teachers, authors, and tiny brands — not lawyers — so you can make confident decisions without feeling overwhelmed.
Note: this article is general information, not legal advice.
Table of Content
✨ The Quick Answer 📚 Where You Can Use Clipart in Kids’ Books 🎯 What Counts as an “End Product” for Books & PDFs 🧩 How Many Clipart Elements per Page Is “Okay”? 🚫 What Isn’t Allowed (and Why) 📜 How WondersArtist Licensing Applies 🧠 Real-Life Scenarios (Yes/No/Be-Careful) ❓ Quick FAQ for Authors & Teachers 📚 Helpful Related Guides 💎 All Access Membership✨ The Quick Answer
For WondersArtist clipart and similar licenses, the short version is:
- Yes — you can use clipart in children’s storybooks, KDP books, activity books, coloring pages, and classroom printables, as long as the book or PDF itself is the finished product you’re selling or sharing.
- Yes — you can use clipart on covers and interiors, including repeated characters, decorative borders, and scene elements.
- No — you may not use a children’s book or PDF as a sneaky way to give people the raw clipart files or to sell a “graphics pack” of our PNGs.
- No — you may not include a separate folder of our individual PNGs with your book (“bonus graphics”) or claim that your book includes clipart they can extract and resell.
If your reader is enjoying a story, activity, or printable page — not downloading loose PNGs — you are generally in safe “end product” territory.
📚 Where You Can Use Clipart in Kids’ Books
Here are common children’s-book-style projects and how they fit under the WondersArtist license.
1. Storybooks & Picture Books (Printed or KDP)
- Allowed: Using clipart characters, animals, and backgrounds to illustrate a story, whether you publish through Amazon KDP, another POD book printer, or locally.
- Allowed: Using clipart for chapter openers, decorative page corners, icons, and simple spot illustrations.
- Allowed: Designing book covers that use our clipart, as long as your book is the end product (you are not selling the cover as a stock design that others can resell as their own template with our art).
2. Activity Books & Workbooks
- Allowed: Adding clipart to mazes, tracing pages, counting sheets, handwriting practice, matching games, and other activities.
- Allowed: KDP-style activity books, classroom workbooks, and printable PDFs for your own students or to sell on Etsy / your website.
- Allowed: Using the same character or motif across many pages to create a cohesive theme.
3. Coloring Pages
- Allowed: Turning clipart into coloring pages or including it inside a coloring book, as long as the pages are part of a finished book or printable set.
- Allowed: Mixing clipart with your own line art, frames, or text prompts.
- Not allowed: Selling a folder of isolated PNG line-art files based on our art as a “coloring clipart pack” — that would count as reselling graphics, not a finished book.
4. Classroom Printables & Story PDFs
- Allowed: Printable story PDFs, readers, flashcards, mini-books, task cards, reward charts, and similar resources that use clipart in the layout.
- Allowed: Sharing PDFs with your own classroom, school, or customers (paid or free) as long as they receive the PDF or printed pages, not our individual PNGs.
🎯 What Counts as an “End Product” for Books & PDFs
Under the WondersArtist license, your project should be an End Product — something that stands on its own and is not just a re-distribution of the original art.
For children’s books and printables, examples of valid End Products are:
- A printed storybook or picture book.
- A KDP paperback or hardcover book.
- A downloadable PDF story, activity book, workbook, or coloring book.
- A set of printable pages sold as a bundle (for example: “Woodland Counting Workbook – 30 pages PDF”).
Your customer is paying for the book or PDF itself, not for a bundle of loose PNGs they can reuse as graphics.
🧩 How Many Clipart Elements per Page Is “Okay”?
Good news: our license does not set a strict limit such as “only 3 clipart pieces per page.” Instead, we care about how you are using the clipart.
Use this simple rule of thumb:
- If the page is clearly a story page, activity page, or worksheet (text, layout, exercises, or scenes) that happens to be decorated with clipart, you are fine — whether you used 3 images or 30.
- If the page is essentially a “clipart sampler sheet” where the buyer’s main goal is to copy / screenshot / extract the individual graphics, you are drifting towards a graphics pack, which is not allowed.
So it’s perfectly okay if a spread is covered in stars, animals, or flowers — as long as the page itself is the product (a coloring page, hidden-picture game, “I Spy” sheet, etc.), not a way to bypass buying the original PNGs.
🚫 What Isn’t Allowed (and Why)
Here are the key “no” areas from the WondersArtist license, translated into children’s-book language:
- No re-selling our source graphics. You can’t sell or share our PNGs/clipart as standalone files, and you can’t turn your book into a shortcut to get those files.
- No “bonus assets” folders. You can’t include a ZIP called /assets/PNG/ with your book that contains our clipart as separate downloads.
- No turning the interiors into a graphics library. Don’t market your book as “includes 200 clipart images you can reuse in your own designs.” Market it as what it truly is: a story, activity book, or resource.
- No uploading our raw files to stock / asset libraries. For example, you can’t upload the same clipart you used in your book to a stock site as loose graphics.
📜 How WondersArtist Licensing Applies
Here is how the core pieces of the WondersArtist license connect directly to kids’ books and printables:
- Unlimited End Products: You can create unlimited books, PDFs, and printables for sale or gifts using WondersArtist graphics.
- Digital & Physical: You can sell both digital PDFs (downloads) and physical printed books or workbooks.
- Templates Allowed: You may create editable templates (for example, a teacher binder or worksheet template) as long as you are not also giving customers a folder of raw clipart files. If elements are exposed in a layered template, buyers still may not pull graphics out and resell them as a pack.
- POD & KDP: Print-on-demand platforms such as Amazon KDP and book printers are allowed, because your book is the end product — not the underlying art.
If something doesn’t clearly fit these examples, you can always pause and ask: “Is the reader getting a finished resource… or effectively getting access to WondersArtist graphics as stock?” If it’s the first, you are usually safe.
🧠 Real-Life Scenarios (Yes / No / Be Careful)
✅ Yes – Clearly Allowed
- A woodland bedtime story where each page uses the same fox family clipart in different scenes.
- A “Learn Your Letters” workbook that uses clipart apples, bears, and cats to decorate each letter page.
- A coloring book of floral frames made from WondersArtist flowers, sold as a PDF or printed KDP book.
- A set of classroom mini-readers (black-and-white PDFs) that teachers print and staple for their students.
⚠️ Be Careful – Adjust the Framing
- A “storybook” where every page is just plain clipart on a white background with no story text or activity. This can still be okay if marketed as a coloring book, flashcards, or activity resource, but avoid presenting it as “download these PNGs inside the PDF.”
- A teacher resource pack that includes both a workbook PDF and a folder of loose PNGs. The workbook is fine; the PNG folder would not be allowed.
- A “create your own story” template where users can move our clipart around in a fully editable file. This is allowed as a template, but end-users still may not extract and resell the graphics. Make sure your description and license text say that clearly.
❌ No – Not Allowed
- Selling a ZIP called “Kids Book Clipart Bundle – 300 PNG characters” where the files are just WondersArtist graphics.
- Including a “bonus graphics pack” of our clipart when someone buys your children’s book.
- Uploading our clipart as stock assets to a site where others can download them and use them as their own graphics.
❓ Quick FAQ for Authors & Teachers
Can I use WondersArtist clipart on both the cover and interior?
Yes. You can decorate your cover, chapter pages, and interiors with WondersArtist art. Your book (printed or PDF) is the end product.
Can I sell my book on KDP, Etsy, and my own website?
Yes. You can sell on multiple platforms at the same time. There is no limit on print runs or number of sales for your book or PDF.
Can I give the book to my class for free?
Yes. Free distribution to your students, newsletter, or audience is allowed. The license cares about how you use the art, not whether you charge money.
Can I let other teachers edit the book?
You can provide editable versions (for example, a PowerPoint or Canva template) as long as they do not receive a separate folder of loose clipart, and as long as they understand they cannot extract and resell the graphics themselves.
What if I’m not sure about a specific idea?
If your idea feels like it’s drifting into “graphics pack” territory, that’s your sign to pause. When in doubt, you can always contact WondersArtist support and ask before launching a big project.
📚 Helpful Related Guides
These articles pair beautifully with this one if you’re building a full publishing or classroom resource toolkit:
- Can You Use Clipart for Commercial Use? Simple License Guide for Crafters & Small Shops
- Can You Use Clipart on Amazon KDP? Rules for Covers & Interiors
- Can You Use Clipart in Paid Workshops, Classes & PDFs? (Rules for Teachers & Coaches)
- How to Turn Digital Clipart into Stickers: A Complete Guide – helpful if you want matching sticker sheets for your book.
💎 All Access Membership
If you’d love a whole library of characters, animals, borders, and backgrounds ready for your next children’s book or classroom pack, All Access Membership makes it easy.
- ✨ Unlimited downloads of clipart, digital papers, journaling pages, and more while your membership is active.
- 📚 Perfect for series – reuse the same characters across multiple books and resources.
- ⚡ Instant access to thousands of themed graphics so you can focus on writing and teaching, not hunting for art.
💎👉 JOIN ALL ACCESS and start building the cutest children’s books and story PDFs with license-friendly clipart today.
🌷 Final Thoughts
Using clipart in children’s books and story PDFs does not have to be scary. Once you understand what an end product is and why raw graphics can’t be shared, you can create with a lot of freedom.
As long as your readers are receiving a finished story, workbook, or printable — not a folder of PNGs — your kids’ books can be as magical, colorful, and clipart-filled as you like.