Jewel Coloring level guide
Jewel Coloring Level 34 Walkthrough
Jewel Coloring Level 34 is a Corgi dog pixel art in a side-sitting pose on a ~14x12 grid. Orange-tan fills the back, sides, and outer legs, while white covers the chest, face blaze, and underbelly. A darker brown saddle pattern runs along the back and haunches. Pink inner ear patches and dark facial features complete the design. The horizontally elongated silhouette — wider than tall — reflects the Corgi's short-legged build, and the tiny two-color legs demand gem-level precision.
Board Notes
- Layout
- A roughly 14x12 pixel grid shows a Corgi in a side-sitting pose. The body is orange-tan across the back, sides, and outer legs. White markings fill the chest, a narrow face blaze running from muzzle to forehead, and the underbelly. Darker brown markings form a saddle pattern along the back and rear haunches. Pink patches fill both inner ears. Dark outline frames the dog and defines eyes and nose. The design is wider than tall, matching the Corgi's characteristic short-legged, long-bodied proportions. Light background.
- Goal
- Place the facial features and pink inner ears first. Fill the white chest, face blaze, and underbelly. Add the darker brown saddle markings along the back. Then fill the orange-tan body across the remaining areas.
- Opening
- Place the dark eye and nose gems on the face. Fill the pink inner ear patches inside both ears. Then fill the white chest, face blaze, and underbelly gems. Add the darker brown saddle markings along the back before filling the orange-tan body.
- Danger Zone
- The orange-tan body and darker brown saddle markings share a long horizontal boundary along the spine — the brown blends subtly into the orange at the edges and follows a natural curve rather than a straight line. The white face blaze is a narrow vertical strip (1-2 gems wide) running from the muzzle between the eyes, easily overwritten by orange from either side. The short legs are only 2-3 gems tall and may contain both orange-tan and white in a cramped space.
- Mechanics
- The Corgi's landscape-oriented body creates a wider-than-tall composition, unlike the portrait-oriented or square animal faces in earlier levels. The breed's saddle marking follows the back's natural curve rather than a geometric shape. The stubby legs pack two colors into very small 2-3 gem tall spaces, requiring precise placement at the individual gem level.
Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 34 (spoiler-free)
- Handle the short legs by filling their white underbelly portion first, then capping each leg with orange-tan on top — trying to divide such tiny areas after filling larger regions causes color bleed.
- Trace the darker brown saddle marking along the spine's natural curve before filling the orange-tan body — the saddle boundary is subtle and becomes invisible once the orange fill is in place.
- If the board feels stuck, look for the color with the cleanest path and use that to regain space.
How to Solve Jewel Coloring Level 34 — Full Solution
- Place the dark eye and nose gems on the Corgi's face to lock in the head position and orientation.
- Fill the pink inner ear patch gems inside both ears — these small details are best placed before surrounding colors crowd them.
- Fill the white chest, face blaze, and underbelly gems, keeping the narrow face blaze strip continuous from the muzzle up to the forehead.
- Add the darker brown saddle marking gems along the back and haunches, tracing the spine's natural curve.
- Fill the orange-tan body gems across the back, sides, and outer legs, working around the pre-placed white and brown regions.
- Complete the dark outline and fill all remaining light background cells.
Colors in this level:
Orange-tan, White, Dark brown, Pink, Black
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Filling the orange-tan body first and then trying to carve out the narrow white face blaze — this 1-2 gem wide strip is nearly impossible to recover once the orange on either side is already placed.
- Treating the darker brown saddle as a straight horizontal band instead of following the back's natural curve — this misplaces gems at the edges where the saddle tapers into the haunches.
- Ignoring the two-color split in the short legs and filling them as solid orange-tan, which erases the white underbelly detail and makes the legs look like solid blocks.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is the grid wider than tall for Level 34?
The Corgi breed has characteristic short legs and an elongated body, giving it a landscape silhouette. The roughly 14x12 grid reflects this — it is wider than tall, unlike the portrait-oriented or square grids used for most animal face designs in earlier levels.
How do I handle the Corgi's tiny legs?
Each leg is only 2-3 gems tall and contains both orange-tan (outer) and white (underbelly) colors. Fill the white underbelly portion of each leg first, then cap it with orange-tan on top. This prevents color bleed in these cramped areas where precise gem-by-gem placement is essential.