Mystery Picture Grid Coloring Pages - Fantasy & Fairy Tales | Woo ... - Free Printable
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Mystery Picture Grid Coloring Pages - Fantasy & Fairy Tales | Woo ...
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Mystery Picture Grid Coloring Pages - Fantasy & Fairy Tales | Woo ...
Let’s solve this step by step.
We’re looking at four mystery picture grids. Each grid has a color key and coordinates (like A1, B2, etc.) that tell you which squares to color with which colors. When you follow the instructions, you reveal a hidden picture — like a unicorn, wizard, or princess.
But since we can’t actually color here, let’s figure out what each picture is supposed to be based on the title and the colored example shown in the top-right panel.
Looking at the top-right panel:
It’s labeled “Rainbow Unicorn Coloring Grid” and shows a pink unicorn with a rainbow mane and tail. The grid is filled in according to the color key below it.
The other three panels are blank grids with their own color keys:
- Bottom-left: “Wizard Coloring Grid” → should make a wizard when colored.
- Bottom-right: “Princess Coloring Grid” → should make a princess when colored.
- Top-left: Also “Rainbow Unicorn Coloring Grid” but blank — same as top-right, just not yet colored.
So if someone were to do this activity, they’d use the color key to fill in the correct squares and reveal the image.
Since the question isn’t asking us to color anything specific, but rather seems to be about understanding how these work — maybe the student is confused about how to read the grid?
Let’s break down how to use one of them.
Take the “Rainbow Unicorn Coloring Grid” (top right):
Color Key says:
- Pink: Color all boxes where row = 3–7 AND column = C–M
- Purple: Row = 8–9, Column = D–E
- Yellow: Row = 10–14, Column = F–G
- Green: Row = 15–16, Column = H–I
- Orange: Row = 17–18, Column = J–K
- Blue: Row = 19–20, Column = L–M
Wait — actually, looking more carefully at the actual color key under the top-right grid:
It lists ranges for rows and columns for each color. For example:
Pink: Rows 3–7, Columns C–M
Purple: Rows 8–9, Columns D–E
Yellow: Rows 10–14, Columns F–G
Green: Rows 15–16, Columns H–I
Orange: Rows 17–18, Columns J–K
Blue: Rows 19–20, Columns L–M
That means for every square whose row number falls in that range AND whose letter column falls in that range, you color it that color.
For instance, square C3 → row 3, column C → falls in Pink range → color pink.
Square E8 → row 8, column E → falls in Purple range → color purple.
Square G12 → row 12, column G → falls in Yellow range → color yellow.
You keep doing this until all specified squares are colored — then the unicorn appears!
Same idea applies to the Wizard and Princess grids — different color ranges create different pictures.
Now, if the student was asked something like “What picture will appear if I color the Wizard grid correctly?” — the answer would be “a wizard”.
Or if they were asked “How do I know which color to use for square K17 on the Rainbow Unicorn grid?” — look at the key: Row 17 is in Orange range (rows 17–18), Column K is in Orange range (columns J–K) → so color orange.
But since no specific question was given beyond showing the image, perhaps the goal is simply to understand how these mystery grids work.
Final Answer:
These are coordinate-based coloring puzzles. You match each grid square’s row number and column letter to the color key, then color accordingly to reveal a hidden picture — like a unicorn, wizard, or princess.
We’re looking at four mystery picture grids. Each grid has a color key and coordinates (like A1, B2, etc.) that tell you which squares to color with which colors. When you follow the instructions, you reveal a hidden picture — like a unicorn, wizard, or princess.
But since we can’t actually color here, let’s figure out what each picture is supposed to be based on the title and the colored example shown in the top-right panel.
Looking at the top-right panel:
It’s labeled “Rainbow Unicorn Coloring Grid” and shows a pink unicorn with a rainbow mane and tail. The grid is filled in according to the color key below it.
The other three panels are blank grids with their own color keys:
- Bottom-left: “Wizard Coloring Grid” → should make a wizard when colored.
- Bottom-right: “Princess Coloring Grid” → should make a princess when colored.
- Top-left: Also “Rainbow Unicorn Coloring Grid” but blank — same as top-right, just not yet colored.
So if someone were to do this activity, they’d use the color key to fill in the correct squares and reveal the image.
Since the question isn’t asking us to color anything specific, but rather seems to be about understanding how these work — maybe the student is confused about how to read the grid?
Let’s break down how to use one of them.
Take the “Rainbow Unicorn Coloring Grid” (top right):
Color Key says:
- Pink: Color all boxes where row = 3–7 AND column = C–M
- Purple: Row = 8–9, Column = D–E
- Yellow: Row = 10–14, Column = F–G
- Green: Row = 15–16, Column = H–I
- Orange: Row = 17–18, Column = J–K
- Blue: Row = 19–20, Column = L–M
Wait — actually, looking more carefully at the actual color key under the top-right grid:
It lists ranges for rows and columns for each color. For example:
Pink: Rows 3–7, Columns C–M
Purple: Rows 8–9, Columns D–E
Yellow: Rows 10–14, Columns F–G
Green: Rows 15–16, Columns H–I
Orange: Rows 17–18, Columns J–K
Blue: Rows 19–20, Columns L–M
That means for every square whose row number falls in that range AND whose letter column falls in that range, you color it that color.
For instance, square C3 → row 3, column C → falls in Pink range → color pink.
Square E8 → row 8, column E → falls in Purple range → color purple.
Square G12 → row 12, column G → falls in Yellow range → color yellow.
You keep doing this until all specified squares are colored — then the unicorn appears!
Same idea applies to the Wizard and Princess grids — different color ranges create different pictures.
Now, if the student was asked something like “What picture will appear if I color the Wizard grid correctly?” — the answer would be “a wizard”.
Or if they were asked “How do I know which color to use for square K17 on the Rainbow Unicorn grid?” — look at the key: Row 17 is in Orange range (rows 17–18), Column K is in Orange range (columns J–K) → so color orange.
But since no specific question was given beyond showing the image, perhaps the goal is simply to understand how these mystery grids work.
Final Answer:
These are coordinate-based coloring puzzles. You match each grid square’s row number and column letter to the color key, then color accordingly to reveal a hidden picture — like a unicorn, wizard, or princess.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of coordinate grid coloring pages.