Jewel Coloring level guide

Jewel Coloring Level 79 Walkthrough

hard 5 colors

Jewel Coloring Level 79 is a beagle puppy standing in three-quarter view on a pale background. The classic tri-color coat covers the body: brown/amber patches on the floppy ears, the top of the head, and the upper sides; a dark charcoal saddle across the back; and white on the face, chest, all four legs, and the belly. Gray shading adds depth to the white leg areas. The three coat zones share a chain of dependent boundaries — brown borders charcoal, charcoal borders white — so each transition must be locked before any large fill starts. This is the first tri-color dog in the 71–80 range.

Board Notes

Layout
A beagle puppy stands in three-quarter view on a pale background. Brown/amber patches cover the floppy drooping ears, the top of the head, and parts of the upper sides. A dark charcoal saddle sits across the back and upper body. White fills the face center (a blaze running between the ears through the muzzle), the chest, all four legs, and the belly underside. Gray shading appears on parts of the white legs and lower body. The face has dark eyes and a dark nose. A short upright tail shows brown/amber and charcoal shading.
Goal
Build the three coat zones — brown ears and head patches, dark charcoal saddle, white underside — as distinct regions before any single zone overruns the others. The face blaze and the brown-to-charcoal-to-white side transitions are the critical boundaries.
Opening
Place the dark eyes and nose on the face. Fill the brown/amber ear patches and head-top patch. Fill the dark charcoal saddle across the back. Add the gray shading on the legs and lower body. Fill the brown/amber tail shading. Trace remaining outline. Fill the white face, chest, legs, and belly. Finish the background.
Danger Zone
The brown-to-charcoal transition on the sides is gradual — pushing the charcoal saddle too low steals space from the white belly, and pushing the brown patches too wide merges them with the charcoal. The white face blaze is narrow and sandwiched between the brown head patch and the nose, shrinking fast if either neighbor overruns it. The floppy ears must droop outward — if the brown ear gems are placed too close to the head, the ears look pointed instead of droopy.
Mechanics
This is the first tri-color dog coat in the range. Unlike single-contrast animals, the beagle has three large fur zones that all share boundaries: brown ↔ charcoal ↔ white, creating a chain of dependent transitions. The floppy ear shape is also a breed-specific detail not seen in other levels nearby.

Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 79 (spoiler-free)

  • Build the coat zones from top to bottom: brown ears first, charcoal saddle second, white belly last. Each new zone clicks into the one above it.
  • Keep the floppy ears drooping outward. If the brown ear gems are placed too tight to the head, the beagle loses its breed silhouette.
  • Think in chain clears. The best move is the one that sets up the next two moves, not just the quickest current match.

How to Solve Jewel Coloring Level 79 — Full Solution

  1. Place the dark eyes and dark nose on the white face area.
  2. Fill the brown/amber patches on both floppy drooping ears and the top of the head.
  3. Fill the dark charcoal saddle across the back and upper sides of the body.
  4. Add the gray shading on the white legs and lower body.
  5. Fill the brown/amber and charcoal shading on the short upright tail.
  6. Trace any remaining dark outline around the head, legs, and tail edges.
  7. Fill the white face blaze, chest, all four legs, and the belly underside.
  8. Complete the pale background around the beagle.

Colors in this level:

Brown, Dark charcoal, White, Gray, Black

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Pushing the dark charcoal saddle too low on the sides, which steals space from the white belly and makes the beagle look like it is wearing a dark blanket over its entire body.
  • Placing the brown ear gems too close to the head so the ears look pointed instead of floppy — the drooping ear shape is the most recognizable beagle trait on the board.
  • Filling the white face before the brown head patch is set, which lets the white blaze expand upward and erases the brown-to-white transition on top of the head.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What breed is the dog in Jewel Coloring Level 79?

    It is a beagle with the classic tri-color coat: brown/amber ears and head, a dark charcoal saddle on the back, and white on the face, chest, legs, and belly. The floppy drooping ears are the clearest breed cue.

  • How do I keep the three coat colors from blending together?

    Build from top to bottom. Place the brown ear and head patches first, then fill the charcoal saddle across the back, and fill the white belly and legs last. Each zone shares a boundary with the one above it, so placing them in order keeps the transitions clean.