Jewel Coloring level guide

Jewel Coloring Level 60 Walkthrough

medium 7 colors

Jewel Coloring Level 60 is a round ceramic teapot pixel art viewed from the side on a pale off-white background. The pot body is a large circle in layered warm tones — a medium brown outer shell, a lighter tan/cream highlight circle in the center suggesting a ceramic glaze reflection, and a slightly darker orange-brown lower half. A dark navy-blue lid with a small round knob sits on top, and the spout extends from the right side of the body with dark blue-black shading. A curved brown handle reaches out from the left. The wide horizontal grid makes this one of the largest single-object boards in the 51–60 range. The centered highlight circle is the key detail — it sits inside the biggest color zone on the board and vanishes the moment the brown body fill starts without it.

Board Notes

Layout
A wide horizontal grid shows a round teapot viewed from the side. The pot body is a large circle in multiple warm tones: medium brown outer shell, lighter tan/cream highlight circle in the center, and darker orange-brown in the lower half. A dark navy-blue lid with a round knob sits on top. A short pouring spout extends to the right with dark blue-black shading. A curved brown handle reaches to the left. Dark outline pieces run along the base. The background is pale off-white.
Goal
Place the navy lid, the spout shading, the base outline, and the centered highlight circle before the large brown body fill begins. The cream highlight is a 'circle within a circle' — it defines the ceramic reflection on the pot surface, and without it the body reads as a flat brown disc instead of a rounded three-dimensional object.
Opening
Start with the dark navy-blue lid and its small round knob on top of the pot body. Trace the dark outline along the base and the navy-blue shading on the spout. Mark the cream/tan highlight circle in the center of the body. Fill the curved brown handle on the left side. Fill the medium brown outer shell and the darker orange-brown lower body around the pre-placed highlight. Close with the pale off-white background.
Danger Zone
The cream highlight circle sits inside the largest brown zone on the board — roughly the center third of the pot body. Starting the brown fill before marking the highlight boundary makes the reflection impossible to locate afterward, because the brown and cream tones are warm neighbors with no structural separator between them. The spout on the right is only 2–3 gems wide at its tip, and its dark blue-black shading blends with the base outline, creating a tight three-color junction (brown body, dark shading, off-white background) at the spout-body join.
Mechanics
This is the first kitchen/tableware object in Jewel Coloring and one of the first boards with a 'shell within a shell' structure — the centered highlight circle must be placed inside the larger body circle before the outer fill begins. The handle and spout extend beyond the main circle in opposite directions, forcing the player to work outward from a central sphere rather than filling a self-contained rectangle. The wide horizontal aspect ratio also means the background is a significant fill that flanks the pot on both sides.

Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 60 (spoiler-free)

  • Think of the cream highlight circle as a target painted on the side of the pot. Outline its boundary before any brown fill touches the center, or the reflection will blur into the body and the pot will lose its dimensionality.
  • Lock the navy lid before filling any brown above the pot midline. The lid is compact and sits right on top of the body — placing brown too high buries the lid edge and shifts the knob off-center.
  • 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 60 — Full Solution

  1. Place the dark navy-blue lid and its small round knob on top of the teapot body.
  2. Trace the dark outline along the base and the dark blue-black shading on the spout extending to the right.
  3. Mark the cream/tan highlight circle in the center of the teapot body — outline its boundary clearly so the reflection area is reserved.
  4. Fill the curved brown handle extending to the left side of the pot.
  5. Fill the medium brown outer shell of the pot body and the darker orange-brown lower half, working carefully around the pre-placed highlight circle.
  6. Complete the pale off-white background surrounding the teapot on all sides.

Colors in this level:

Medium brown, Dark navy-blue, Cream, Tan, Orange-brown, Off-white, Black

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Starting the brown body fill before marking the cream highlight circle. The cream and brown tones are both warm and sit next to each other with no hard separator — once brown covers the center, there is no way to find the highlight boundary without undoing a large section of the body.
  • Placing brown too high on the pot and burying the navy-blue lid edge. The lid is compact and the lid-to-body junction is only one row; a single extra brown gem above the equator merges the lid into the shell.
  • Treating the spout as a simple extension and missing its dark blue-black shading. Without the shading, the spout blends into the background on one side and the body on the other, making the pot look like a round ball with no functional feature.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is the cream circle in the middle of the teapot?

    It represents a ceramic glaze reflection — the shiny highlight you see on a round pot where light hits the surface. It is a lighter tan/cream circle sitting inside the larger brown body. Mark its boundary before filling any brown, because the two warm tones are neighbors and there is no outline between them.

  • Why does the teapot look like a flat disc instead of a rounded pot?

    The three-dimensional look comes from three layers of warm tone: the darker orange-brown lower body, the medium brown outer shell, and the lighter cream highlight circle in the center. If the highlight is missing or the lower body matches the upper shell, the pot loses all depth and reads as a uniform brown circle.