Jewel Coloring level guide
Jewel Coloring Level 93 Walkthrough
Jewel Coloring Level 93 builds open orange scissors with two white handle holes, a white center seam, and mismatched blue blades. Finish every open cavity first, then lock the two blade colors and wrap the orange handles around them so the scissors stay readable.
Board Notes
- Layout
- A pair of open scissors stands upright on a pale background. The finger loops are orange, each loop keeps a white square hole ringed with gray cells, the left blade is lighter steel blue, the right blade is darker slate blue, and a white seam runs up the middle from a tiny white pivot dot.
- Goal
- Place the pivot, the blade seam, and both handle holes before filling the orange loops and blue blades. The tool only reads as scissors if those openings stay visible.
- Opening
- Start with the white pivot dot and the two white square holes inside the handle loops. Extend the white seam up through the blades next, then fill the lighter left blade, the darker right blade, and finally the orange handles with the brown center shank.
- Danger Zone
- The neck where the blades meet the handles is a tight three-color junction — orange loops, gray blade rails, and white pivot all converge in a few gems. If the orange fill drifts past the pivot dot, it closes the white seam and merges both blades into the handles, collapsing the scissors into one chunky Y-shape. Each white loop hole is only about 4–6 gems surrounded entirely by orange; filling the handles as solid circles instead of rings buries the holes instantly. The two blade colors (lighter steel blue on the left, darker slate blue on the right) are also close enough in tone that placing the wrong blue on the wrong side erases the blade split without any obvious visual warning.
- Mechanics
- This is a negative-space board where the object's identity depends more on what is left empty than on what is colored. The two loop holes and the white blade seam are the real structural skeleton of the scissors; without them the colored fills just produce a shapeless fork. Unlike most icon levels where the challenge is protecting small colored details inside a large body, here the challenge is protecting small blank spaces inside colored bodies — an inverted version of the usual pattern. The mismatched blade colors add a secondary same-family-tone challenge on top of the negative-space problem.
Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 93 (spoiler-free)
- Solve both white loop holes before the orange handles feel finished.
- Keep the white seam visible between the two blade colors all the way to the top.
- 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 93 — Full Solution
- Place the small white pivot dot at the bottom center where the two blades meet the handles.
- Fill the white square cavity inside the left handle loop and the matching white cavity inside the right handle loop.
- Extend the white seam up through the center of the scissors from the pivot into the blades.
- Fill the lighter steel-blue blade on the left side.
- Fill the darker slate-blue blade on the right side and keep the white seam visible between them.
- Finish the orange handle loops and the brown center shank, then clear the remaining pale background.
Colors in this level:
Orange, Steel blue, Slate blue, White, Gray, Brown
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Closing either handle hole with orange fill — each hole is only about 4–6 gems surrounded entirely by orange, and filling the loop as a solid circle instead of a ring buries the opening instantly, removing the feature that makes the handle look like a finger loop.
- Covering the white blade seam and turning the two blades into one solid block. The seam runs from the pivot dot up through the center of both blades; once it is overwritten, the lighter steel-blue left blade and darker slate-blue right blade merge into a single flat shape with no internal division.
- Ignoring the lighter-left and darker-right blade color split. The two blues are close in tone, and placing the wrong shade on the wrong side erases the blade distinction without any obvious contrast warning — the scissors end up with one uniform blue wedge instead of two individually readable blades.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I fill first in Jewel Coloring Level 93?
Start with the white pivot, the two white handle holes, and the white blade seam. Those open spaces make the object read as scissors before the colored fills begin.
Why do the scissors look like one solid shape?
That happens when the white loop holes or the white seam between the blades are filled over. Those open gaps are the key structure on this board.