Jewel Coloring level guide
Jewel Coloring Level 94 Walkthrough
Jewel Coloring Level 94 forms a hanging award with a sky-blue ribbon, a white Y stripe, a yellow medal, and a red center stone inside an orange frame. Build the gem, ring, and white stripe first, then fill the medal and ribbon around those anchors so the top and bottom sections stay distinct.
Board Notes
- Layout
- A medal hangs beneath a wide sky-blue ribbon. The ribbon has a white Y-shaped stripe cut through the middle and small white tabs near the top corners, while the lower medal is yellow with an orange square ring and a red center gem carrying a white highlight.
- Goal
- Anchor the red gem and the white ribbon stripe before filling the broad blue and yellow fields. The award only reads cleanly if the white cutout stays open and the red center remains framed inside the orange ring.
- Opening
- Place the red center gem and its white highlight first, then wrap the orange square ring around it. Fill the white Y stripe and the small white top tabs next, spread the yellow medal body after that, and close the sky-blue ribbon last.
- Danger Zone
- The sky-blue ribbon dominates the upper half of the board and shares the same cool tone family as the pale background, making the ribbon boundaries hard to read at a glance. If the blue fill starts before the white Y stripe is fully traced, the stripe — which is only 1–2 gems wide through most of its length — vanishes inside the blue mass with no outline to mark its former path. The neck between the ribbon and the medal is a narrow 2–3 gem bridge; thickening it by even one gem on either side turns the hanging shape into a squat block. The orange square ring around the red center gem is only one gem wide on each side, so any yellow medal fill that drifts inward past the ring merges the gem directly into the medal body.
- Mechanics
- This is a two-section icon board — the upper ribbon and the lower medal are connected by a narrow neck but have completely different internal structures. The ribbon is defined by a cutout (the white Y stripe), while the medal is defined by concentric framing (red gem inside orange ring inside yellow body). The solve alternates between a negative-space challenge on top and a ring-protection challenge on the bottom, which is a wider planning range than most single-structure boards. The narrow neck also acts as a chokepoint: getting its width wrong distorts the proportions of both sections.
Quick Tips for Jewel Coloring Level 94 (spoiler-free)
- Use the white Y stripe as the centerline for both sides of the ribbon.
- Finish the orange ring before the yellow medal body so the red center does not drift.
- 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 94 — Full Solution
- Place the red center gem in the middle of the medal and keep the white highlight on its upper-left side.
- Wrap the orange square ring around the red gem.
- Fill the white Y-shaped stripe that cuts down the center of the ribbon and add the small white tabs near the top corners.
- Spread the yellow medal body around the orange ring, including the side flares and lower point.
- Fill the sky-blue ribbon around the white stripe without closing the narrow neck above the medal.
- Finish the remaining pale background cells around the award.
Colors in this level:
Sky blue, White, Yellow, Orange, Red
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Flooding the sky-blue ribbon before the white Y stripe is fully traced — the stripe is only 1–2 gems wide through most of its path, and once blue covers both sides there is no contrast left to locate the stripe's route without undoing a large section of the upper half.
- Letting the orange square ring merge into the yellow medal body. The ring is only one gem wide on each side of the red center, and filling yellow inward past the ring boundary erases the framing layer, making the red gem float directly in a yellow field with no visible setting.
- Thickening the neck above the medal until the ribbon loses its hanging shape. The neck bridge is only 2–3 gems wide; adding even one extra gem on either side turns the airy connector into a solid block and makes the award look squat instead of elegantly suspended.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I fill first in Jewel Coloring Level 94?
Start with the red center gem, the orange ring around it, and the white Y stripe in the ribbon. Those three anchors define both halves of the award before the large blue and yellow fills begin.
Why does the award stop looking like a medal?
That usually means the white ribbon stripe got buried or the orange ring around the red gem was lost. Those two details separate the ribbon from the medal.