US Curriculum Alignment
CCSS SL.K.5, NGSS 1-ESS1-1, NGSS 5-ESS1-1
Planet Poster – Pluto
A clean Pluto poster on a neutral background, focused on its size, color, and surface.
- Instant digital download after checkout
- Print at home, as many times as you like
- High-resolution PDF — ready for A4 & US Letter
- Formats
- A2, A3, A4, Arch-C, Tabloid, US Letter
- Type
- Planet Poster
Pluto is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper Belt, a distant, icy world with a heart-shaped nitrogen-ice glacier known as Tombaugh Regio. This poster illustrates its mottled, icy surface and reddish-brown tones caused by sunlight interacting with frozen gases.
This instant printable digital download offers Montessori-style space learning for curious kids. Print it in your preferred size to discuss why Pluto was reclassified from planet to dwarf planet in 2006.
Small details
matter.
The same hand-drawn look across the whole collection — verified against the real species, animal by animal.
“Children often remember the details they see. That is why those details matter.”
Each illustration is reviewed before it becomes part of a product. We check proportions, visible anatomy, species-specific markings and overall readability.
Where something does not feel right, it is corrected. That may mean adjusting the shape of a paw, the position of an eye, the length of a beak, the curve of a horn or the pattern of a coat.
Often
asked.
Pluto is a dwarf planet located in the Kuiper Belt, a region of icy bodies beyond Neptune, and is made of a mix of rock and ice. It is smaller than Earth's Moon, with a diameter of about 2,377 km.
Pluto orbits at an average distance of about 5.9 billion km from the Sun, taking roughly 248 Earth years to complete one orbit. Its elliptical path is so stretched that it sometimes comes closer to the Sun than Neptune does.
In 2006, the International Astronomical Union reclassified Pluto as a dwarf planet because, unlike the eight full planets, it has not cleared other objects from its orbital neighborhood. It still meets the other criteria of orbiting the Sun and being rounded by its own gravity.


