Jewel Coloring level guide

Jewel Coloring Level 76 Walkthrough

medium 5 colors

Jewel Coloring Level 76 is a chibi cow standing front-facing on a pale blue-gray background. Dark charcoal covers the head top, ears, arms, legs, and a small tail, while the face center and large belly are white. A pink muzzle sits below the face, two small yellow horns poke from the top of the head, and matching yellow hooves finish each foot. The front-facing pose demands left-right symmetry — any shift in the dark-to-white boundary makes the cow look crooked. Start with the tiny yellow accents and the pink muzzle, then build the two large fill zones around them.

Board Notes

Layout
A chibi cow stands centered and front-facing on a pale blue-gray background. The top of the head, both ears, arms, legs, and a small tail on the right are dark charcoal. The face center is white, with dark eye patches framing two small white eye gems. A pink muzzle/snout patch sits on the upper chest below the face. The belly is a large white zone. Two small yellow horns sit at the top of the head, and small yellow hooves cap each foot.
Goal
Place the yellow horns and hooves, the pink muzzle, and the white eyes before the large dark charcoal and white body fills begin. The horns and hooves are the smallest color group on the board and the first details to get buried.
Opening
Place the two yellow horns at the top. Add the yellow hooves at the feet. Fill the pink muzzle patch. Place the white eyes inside the dark face. Fill the dark charcoal head, ears, arms, legs, and tail. Fill the white face and belly. Finish the background.
Danger Zone
The dark charcoal and white face meet tightly around the eyes — shifting that boundary by one gem pushes the face off-center and breaks the symmetry. The yellow horns are only one or two gems each and easily forgotten once the dark head fill starts. The yellow hooves are similarly small and risk merging into the dark legs.
Mechanics
This is a front-facing patchwork character where the cow's dark-on-white pattern must stay symmetrical to read correctly. Unlike side-view animals, any left-right imbalance is immediately visible. The yellow accents (horns and hooves) are the warmest color on the board and serve as the only highlights against the cool dark-and-white body.

Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 76 (spoiler-free)

  • Place all four yellow accent gems (two horns, two hooves) before any other fill. They are the smallest and warmest details on the board and anchor the cow's top and bottom.
  • Keep the white face centered between the dark patches. If one side expands even slightly, the front-facing symmetry breaks.
  • 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 76 — Full Solution

  1. Place the two small yellow horn gems at the top of the head.
  2. Add the yellow hoof gems at the bottom of each foot.
  3. Fill the pink muzzle/snout patch below the face on the upper chest.
  4. Place the small white eye gems inside the dark face area.
  5. Fill the dark charcoal head top, ears, arms, legs, and the small tail on the right side.
  6. Fill the white face center and the large white belly zone.
  7. Complete the pale blue-gray background around the cow.

Colors in this level:

Dark charcoal, White, Pink, Yellow, Pale blue-gray

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Starting the dark head fill before placing the yellow horns, which buries the one-to-two-gem horns under the charcoal and makes them unrecoverable.
  • Expanding the dark eye patch on one side more than the other, which pushes the white face off-center and breaks the front-facing symmetry.
  • Skipping the pink muzzle and leaving the chest area all white, which removes the cow's snout and makes the character look like a generic penguin silhouette.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Where are the yellow details in Jewel Coloring Level 76?

    There are two yellow horns at the very top of the head and two yellow hooves at the bottom of the feet. They are the smallest color group on the board — only a few gems total — so place them first before the dark charcoal and white fills start.

  • Why does the cow look lopsided?

    The front-facing pose requires the dark patches to be symmetrical around the white face center. If one dark eye patch or one arm grows wider than the other, the symmetry breaks. Use the white eyes as your center reference and fill the dark patches evenly on both sides.