Jewel Coloring level guide
Jewel Coloring Level 89 Walkthrough
Jewel Coloring Level 89 is a yellow padlock with a dark shackle, a loose gray key lying on the left, and a small round charm on the right. The lock face carries a maroon stud, a cream vertical strip, and a short brown bar. Build those small details and side accessories first, then let the yellow body close around them.
Board Notes
- Layout
- A pale background surrounds a yellow padlock with a dark gray shackle. A jagged gray key lies diagonally on the left, a small round charm hangs on the right, and the lock face includes a maroon-and-gray stud near the top, a pale cream vertical strip on the right, a short brown bar across the middle, and a small gray plate near the bottom.
- Goal
- Protect the face details and both side accessories before the yellow body expands. The set only reads clearly if the left key, right charm, and open shackle stay separate from the main lock face.
- Opening
- Place the maroon-and-gray stud first, then the cream strip and brown bar across the face. Build the left key and the round right charm before tracing the dark shackle and outer casing. Fill the yellow body only after the accessory shapes are already locked.
- Danger Zone
- The left key shares the same dark gray tones as the lock casing and outer shadow. If the outer shadow is filled before the key teeth are individually mapped, the jagged tooth profile merges into the surrounding dark fill and the key becomes a blunt gray wedge with no functional detail — losing the only feature that identifies it as a key. The face stud is a small 3–4 gem cluster sitting right where the yellow body meets the dark shackle; filling either zone past the stud boundary erases it with no outline to mark its position. The shackle opening at the top is only 2–3 gems wide, and dark gray cells line both sides of the gap, so a single misplaced gem seals the opening and turns the lock top into a solid block.
- Mechanics
- This is the first multi-object icon in the recent range — the board contains three separate items (padlock, loose key, and side charm) that must each maintain their own silhouette. Unlike single-icon levels where one body dominates the board, the solve here requires the player to track three independent shapes and their respective detail zones simultaneously. The key's jagged tooth profile and the charm's circular outline both sit against the lock's dominant yellow body, creating two separate boundary-management challenges on opposite sides of the board.
Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 89 (spoiler-free)
- Finish the left key before thickening the casing. Its teeth are the easiest detail to bury.
- Treat the face stud, cream strip, and brown bar as a vertical stack that must stay visible inside the yellow body.
- 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 89 — Full Solution
- Place the maroon side petals and gray center of the stud near the top of the lock face.
- Add the pale cream vertical strip on the right side of the face and the short brown bar across the middle.
- Fill the small brown dot below the stud and the gray plate near the bottom of the lock.
- Build the loose gray key on the left, including its angled teeth and darker base.
- Fill the round charm on the right and trace the dark shackle and outer casing around the lock.
- Finish the yellow body and the pale background around all three pieces.
Colors in this level:
Yellow, Dark gray, Pale gray, Cream, Maroon, Brown
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Flooding the yellow body before the face stud, cream strip, and brown bar are in place — all three details are small clusters embedded inside the largest color zone on the board, and once yellow covers the center face there is no outline or contrast to guide their repositioning.
- Letting the left key disappear into the gray outer casing. The key teeth share the same dark gray tone as the lock's shadow and border cells; without mapping the jagged profile first, the key merges into the surrounding fill and reads as a featureless gray extension of the casing.
- Closing the shackle opening so the lock top turns into a solid block. The gap is only 2–3 gems wide with dark gray cells on both sides; a single misplaced gem seals the arch and removes the feature that makes the object recognizable as a padlock rather than a plain rectangle.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I place first in Jewel Coloring Level 89?
Start with the face stud, the cream strip, and the brown bar, then map the left key and the right charm. Those details are the easiest pieces to lose once the yellow body starts growing.
Why does the lock set look like one blob?
That usually means the gray casing swallowed the loose key or the shackle opening closed. Keep the left key, right charm, and top loop distinct until the end.