Jewel Coloring level guide
Jewel Coloring Level 4 Walkthrough
Jewel Coloring Level 4 is a tomato pixel art that introduces multi-shade sorting — three variations of red (bright, dark maroon, light pink-red) plus green and dark background on a 14×14 grid. Correctly separating the red shades so the tomato's 3D shading reads properly is the core challenge.
Board Notes
- Layout
- A roughly 14×14 pixel grid shows a tomato with a green stem and small leaf on top. The tomato body uses bright red for the main fill, darker red/maroon for shading on the left side, and lighter pinkish-red for the highlight on the right. The background is dark charcoal. A red gem counter below the grid shows the large number of red gems to place.
- Goal
- Fill the bright red tomato body first, then layer the darker maroon shading and lighter pink-red highlights in their correct positions to give the tomato 3D roundness. The green stem and dark background frame the finished art.
- Opening
- Start with bright red gems in the centre of the tomato and work outward, skipping cells that clearly need darker or lighter shades. Stash maroon gems on the shelf as you encounter them.
- Danger Zone
- The three shades of red differ only in brightness and are very easy to confuse. The left-side arc where dark maroon meets bright red is the most error-prone area. Small black seed or shadow details near the 4-5 o'clock position can also be overlooked.
- Mechanics
- Level 4 is the first level requiring shade discrimination within a single color family. Unlike Level 2 where red and pink are clearly different hues, here all three target shades are variants of red, and the player must read brightness rather than hue.
Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 4 (spoiler-free)
- When a level uses multiple shades of the same color, complete the dominant shade first and use the shelf to separate the accent shades — trying to place all reds simultaneously leads to costly swaps at the shade boundaries.
- With 5 colors in play, clear the pair with the fewest blockers first so the board opens up instead of tightening.
- 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 4 — Full Solution
- Fill the bright red tomato body first — it covers the largest area. Work from the centre outward, skipping cells that need darker or lighter shades.
- Stash darker maroon gems on the shelf as you encounter them, then batch-place them into the left-side shading arc of the tomato.
- Place the lighter pinkish-red highlight gems along the upper-right curve where the light catches the tomato surface.
- Sort the green gems into the stem at the top and the small leaf extending to the right.
- Fill the dark background cells around the tomato silhouette and place any remaining detail gems — seed dots and shadow specks — in their exact positions.
Colors in this level:
Bright red, Maroon, Pink-red, Green, Dark charcoal
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Placing a bright red gem into a maroon shading cell on the left arc — the finished tomato will look flat without the dark-to-light gradient.
- Overlooking the small seed or shadow detail gems near the lower-right interior of the tomato, which are only a few dark specks.
- Rushing to fill the green stem before completing the red body, which wastes shelf space on green gems you could place later.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you tell the three red shades apart in Jewel Coloring Level 4?
Bright red is vivid and saturated, maroon is noticeably darker and muted, and pink-red is lighter and softer. Compare them side by side on the grid — the brightness difference is subtle but consistent.
Why does the tomato look flat even after placing all gems?
You probably swapped the maroon shading and bright red fill at the left-side boundary. The maroon gems must sit along the left arc to create the 3D shadow effect.