Jewel Coloring level guide

Jewel Coloring Level 36 Walkthrough

hard 5 colors

Jewel Coloring Level 36 is a nighttime axe scene pixel art on a large grid. A brown wooden handle supports a silver/grey axe blade, set against a dark blue night sky with a white crescent moon in the upper area and green grass covering the bottom. This scene-type composition layers a foreground object over distinct background regions, requiring the player to manage depth and maintain the axe's continuity across two different background colors.

Board Notes

Layout
A large pixel grid depicts a nighttime scene. A brown wooden axe handle runs vertically or diagonally through the center, topped by a silver/grey axe blade with a curved cutting edge. Dark blue night sky fills the upper and middle portions of the grid. A white crescent moon sits in the upper sky area as a small curved cluster. Green grass or ground covers the bottom rows. Dark outline may frame the axe and separate the sky from the ground. Light background where not covered by scene elements.
Goal
Fill the dark blue night sky as the largest region spanning the upper and middle grid. Place the green grass across the bottom rows. Lay the brown axe handle through the center of the scene. Complete the silver/grey axe blade at the top of the handle. Position the white crescent moon arc in the upper sky.
Opening
Begin with the white crescent moon gems in the upper sky — this small curved detail is easiest to place on a mostly empty grid. Next, fill the silver/grey axe blade, establishing the curved cutting edge. Then lay the brown handle through the center, followed by the green ground and the dark blue sky last.
Danger Zone
The dark blue sky meets the silver/grey blade along a curved edge where the two tones can blur together in low-contrast areas. The white crescent moon is a small cluster of roughly 6-10 gems entirely enclosed by dark blue sky — over-extending sky fill swallows it. The brown handle passes through both sky and grass zones, requiring unbroken continuity across the horizon color transition. The grass-to-sky horizon is a straight horizontal boundary where a single misplaced row shifts the entire landscape split.
Mechanics
This is a scene-type level combining a foreground object (axe) with layered background regions (sky and ground) and a secondary detail (moon). The axe handle sits in front of both backgrounds, crossing the horizon line. The crescent moon has curved negative space — the dark area inside the arc must remain sky-colored, so only the bright outer arc gets filled with white gems.

Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 36 (spoiler-free)

  • Fill the crescent moon and axe blade before either large background region — both sit within the massive dark blue sky, and recovering their boundaries after sky fill is extremely difficult.
  • Treat the brown handle as one continuous stroke from bottom to top, ignoring the grass-to-sky transition behind it — any break at the horizon creates a visible gap in the handle.
  • 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 36 — Full Solution

  1. Place the white crescent moon gems in the upper sky area, filling only the bright outer arc and leaving the inner curve as space for sky-colored gems.
  2. Fill the silver/grey axe blade gems at the top of the handle, carefully tracing the curved cutting edge against the surrounding dark background.
  3. Lay the brown wooden handle gems in a continuous line through the center of the scene, crossing from the grass zone into the sky zone without interruption.
  4. Fill the green grass/ground gems across the bottom rows up to the horizon line, working around the lower portion of the handle.
  5. Fill the dark blue night sky gems across all remaining upper and middle cells, carefully preserving the pre-placed moon, blade, and handle boundaries.
  6. Complete any dark outline framing the axe silhouette and fill remaining background cells.

Colors in this level:

Dark blue, Brown, Silver, Green, White

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Filling the dark blue sky first and then trying to place the white crescent moon within it — the moon is only 6-10 gems and its curved shape is nearly impossible to reconstruct inside a solid dark blue mass.
  • Breaking the brown handle at the grass-to-sky horizon, treating the upper and lower halves as separate segments, which leaves a visible gap where the two background colors meet.
  • Confusing the silver/grey axe blade with the dark blue sky along the blade's curved edge, which erases the blade's outline and merges it into the night background.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What makes Level 36 different from earlier levels?

    Level 36 is one of the first scene-type compositions rather than a single isolated object. It layers a foreground axe over two distinct background regions — dark blue sky and green grass — with a secondary detail (crescent moon). Managing depth and maintaining the axe handle across two background colors adds complexity that single-object levels don't have.

  • How do I handle the crescent moon shape?

    The crescent moon is a curved arc, not a filled circle. Only place white gems along the bright outer edge of the crescent — the dark area inside the arc should remain as sky-colored gems. Fill the moon before the surrounding sky so you can clearly see where the arc begins and ends.