Jewel Coloring level guide
Jewel Coloring Level 14 Walkthrough
Jewel Coloring Level 14 is a gold heart-shaped pendant on a chain against a split pink-and-lime-green background. This is the first level with a two-tone background — the player must track the vertical center line while keeping the fragile single-gem-wide chain unbroken and separating the gold pendant from its brown outline details.
Board Notes
- Layout
- A large pixel grid shows a heart-shaped pendant hanging from a gold chain. The background is split vertically — pink on the left half and lime green on the right half. The pendant is gold or yellow with brown outline details for dimension. The chain extends upward in a V or arc shape, also in gold. The grid is large to accommodate both the pendant and the two-tone background.
- Goal
- Fill the two background halves accurately — pink left, green right — then build the gold pendant and trace the single-gem-wide chain, finishing with the brown outline details.
- Opening
- Identify the vertical center column and fill pink background to the left and lime green to the right. Then place gold gems forming the heart pendant and trace the chain upward from the pendant top.
- Danger Zone
- The pink-to-green background split runs through or near the pendant, so the player must track which background color falls on each side even behind the pendant. The chain is only 1 gem wide — overfilling background into a chain link breaks it visually. The brown heart outline is thin and can be confused with the gold body.
- Mechanics
- This is the first level with a two-tone split background, adding a positional rule the player has never encountered. Instead of a uniform background, the player must track the vertical center line and assign different colors to each half. The chain is one of the thinnest structural elements seen so far.
Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 14 (spoiler-free)
- Count the grid columns and mark the exact vertical center before placing any background — this prevents pink and green from bleeding across the divide.
- Place the chain before filling background around it — the 1-gem-wide links are much easier to trace on an empty grid.
- Think in chain clears. The best move is the one that sets up the next two moves, not just the quickest current match.
How to Solve Jewel Coloring Level 14 — Full Solution
- Count the grid columns and identify the exact vertical center line that divides the background.
- Fill pink background gems across the left half of the grid, stopping at the center line.
- Fill lime green background gems across the right half of the grid, maintaining a clean vertical split.
- Place gold or yellow gems forming the heart pendant shape at the center of the grid.
- Add brown outline details around the heart's edges to create dimensional shading and a 3D effect.
- Trace the gold chain links upward from the pendant top in a V or arc pattern — keep each link exactly 1 gem wide — then fill any remaining background cells, assigning correct pink or green based on which side of center each cell falls.
Colors in this level:
Pink, Lime green, Gold, Brown
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Losing track of the vertical center line and letting pink background bleed into the green half or vice versa, creating an uneven split that ruins the design.
- Overfilling pink or green background gems into the 1-gem-wide chain links, breaking the chain and disconnecting the pendant.
- Using gold gems where brown outline details belong around the heart, removing the 3D shading effect that gives the pendant its depth.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you handle the split background in Jewel Coloring Level 14?
Count the total grid columns, find the exact midpoint, then fill pink to the left and lime green to the right. Do this before placing the pendant so you have a clean reference for which color goes where, even in cells partially hidden by the pendant.
How do you keep the chain from breaking in Level 14?
Place the gold chain gems before filling the background around them. The chain is only 1 gem wide, so tracing it on an empty grid is far easier than trying to preserve narrow gaps while filling large background areas.