Jewel Coloring level guide
Jewel Coloring Level 59 Walkthrough
Jewel Coloring Level 59 is a smiling kawaii starfish pixel art sitting on a bright yellow background. The five-armed body is mostly orange, with a darker orange ridge running down the center of the top arm and soft pink accent sections wrapping the lower arm edges and the center underside. Two tiny dark eyes and a small curved mouth form a cheerful face in the middle of the body. The level is structurally simple — few colors, broad shapes — but the face and pink accents are so small relative to the orange mass that skipping them first makes the starfish look like a blank orange blob with no personality.
Board Notes
- Layout
- A five-armed starfish sits centered on a bright yellow background. The main body is orange. A darker orange ridge runs vertically down the top arm, creating a shaded spine effect. Soft pink accent sections appear around the edges of the lower arms and across the center underside of the body. Two small dark eyes and a tiny curved smile sit in the middle. The starfish arms are slightly uneven in width, with the top arm being the widest.
- Goal
- Place the face details and pink edge accents before the broad orange fill starts. The dark eyes and smile are the starfish's entire expression — once orange covers the center, the face is lost. The pink accents along the lower arms and underside are also short broken sections, each only a few gems, that define the creature's rounded underside.
- Opening
- Start with the two dark eyes and the small curved smile in the center of the starfish. Mark every pink accent section around the lower arm edges and the center underside. Fill the darker orange ridge down the top arm. Then flood the main orange body across all five arms and finish the bright yellow background.
- Danger Zone
- The face sits in the dead center of the largest orange region and is only about 4–5 gems total — two eyes and one mouth. If the orange fill starts from the center outward, those gems are the first to be buried. The pink accents are scattered in short broken patches around the lower arms rather than forming one continuous border, so it is easy to place three out of four patches and think the job is done.
- Mechanics
- This is a character-expression board rather than a detail-heavy object. The technical difficulty is low, but the emotional readability of the finished design depends entirely on whether the tiny face and subtle pink undersides survive the fill. It is a good test of discipline — the temptation is to flood the obvious orange first, which is exactly the move that ruins the result.
Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 59 (spoiler-free)
- Put the eyes and smile down as your very first move. The center face is the most important detail on the board and the easiest to lose.
- Check every lower arm for pink accent patches before declaring the body complete. The patches are broken into separate short sections, and forgetting even one makes the starfish look asymmetric.
- 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 59 — Full Solution
- Place the two dark eye gems and the small curved smile in the center of the starfish body.
- Mark every pink accent section around the lower arm edges and across the center underside — walk the perimeter of each arm to make sure no patch is skipped.
- Fill the darker orange ridge running vertically down the center of the top arm.
- Flood the main orange starfish body across all five arms, stopping cleanly at the pink accent boundaries.
- Fill the bright yellow background around the entire starfish outline.
Colors in this level:
Orange, Dark orange, Pink, Yellow, Black
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Starting the orange fill from the center of the starfish and burying the face gems. The two eyes and one mouth are only 4–5 total gems in the middle of the board's largest color zone — once orange covers them, there is no structural cue to relocate them.
- Missing one of the pink accent patches on a lower arm. The patches are short and broken, so it is easy to think the underside is done when one 2–3 gem section is still unplaced. The resulting asymmetry is subtle but visible in the finished design.
- Forgetting the darker orange top-arm ridge. Without it, the top arm blends into the main body and the starfish loses its shading depth — the difference between a flat shape and a character with dimensionality.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my starfish have no personality?
That almost always means the tiny face was buried by the orange fill. The two dark eyes and small curved smile are only about 4–5 gems total, sitting in the dead center of the largest orange zone. If you filled orange first, undo the center area and re-place the face before continuing.
Where are the pink accent sections on the starfish?
They wrap around the edges of the lower arms and across the center underside of the body. Unlike a continuous outline, they appear as short broken patches — each only a few gems — scattered along the lower half. Walk the perimeter of each lower arm to find them all before filling orange.