Jewel Coloring level guide

Jewel Coloring Level 64 Walkthrough

easy 6 colors

Jewel Coloring Level 64 is a sunflower with a three-tone center — dark brown core, lighter brown/amber ring, and orange transitional zone — surrounded by bright yellow petals and lime-green corner leaves on a white background. The concentric warm rings in the center grade from dark to light, and the main risk is flattening them into one muddy disk. Build the center outward ring by ring, lock the green corners, then fill the petals section by section to keep the pointed tips sharp.

Board Notes

Layout
A large sunflower fills most of the square board. The center has a dark brown inner disk, a lighter brown/amber ring around it, and an orange transitional zone before the yellow petals begin. Bright yellow petals radiate outward in jagged pointed sections. Lime-green leaf blocks fill at least two opposite corners (lower-right and upper-left). The remaining corner areas are white background.
Goal
Keep the three concentric center tones — dark brown, light brown/amber, and orange — separate from each other and from the yellow petals. If any two rings merge, the sunflower center loses its depth and shading. The green corner leaves must also stay distinct from both the petal tips and the white background.
Opening
Fill the dark brown inner disk first, then the lighter brown/amber ring, then the orange transition zone. Place the green corner leaves, fill the yellow petals section by section around the circumference, and finish with the white background.
Danger Zone
The three warm center tones share concentric boundaries and are close enough in hue to flatten into one brown mass. The yellow petal tips are short pointed sections — sweeping the yellow fill too fast rounds them off. The green leaves tuck right against the outermost petals and can be mistaken for empty background cells.
Mechanics
This is a radial layout with concentric color grading in the center. Unlike most levels where colors follow structural edges, here the shades grade outward in smooth rings, making precise shade separation the primary challenge.

Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 64 (spoiler-free)

  • Fill the center rings one shade at a time from darkest to lightest. Once all three warm tones are down, the yellow petals have a clear starting boundary.
  • Work the petals in small sections around the disk rather than sweeping all yellow at once. That keeps the pointed outer tips sharp instead of rounded off.
  • 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 64 — Full Solution

  1. Fill the dark brown inner center disk at the heart of the sunflower.
  2. Fill the lighter brown/amber ring surrounding the dark core.
  3. Add the orange transitional gems between the amber ring and the start of the yellow petals.
  4. Place the lime-green leaf blocks in the lower-right and upper-left corner areas.
  5. Fill the yellow petals section by section around the circumference, keeping each pointed tip intact.
  6. Complete the white background in the remaining corners and edges.

Colors in this level:

Dark brown, Brown, Orange, Yellow, Lime green, White

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Filling the center as one brown mass without separating the dark core, amber ring, and orange transition — the sunflower center looks flat and muddy.
  • Sweeping all yellow petals at once instead of section by section, which rounds off the jagged petal tips and makes the flower edge too smooth.
  • Confusing the green corner leaves with empty white background cells and skipping them.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How many brown shades are in the sunflower center?

    There are three concentric tones: a dark brown inner disk, a lighter brown/amber middle ring, and an orange transitional zone where the center meets the yellow petals. Fill them one at a time from darkest to lightest.

  • Why do my petals look rounded instead of pointed?

    The petal tips are only 1-2 gems wide. If you sweep the yellow fill across the whole ring at once, those tiny points get missed or rounded off. Work petal by petal in small sections to keep each tip sharp.