NICETY Acrylic Markers - My First Test on a Disney Mystery Coloring Book

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🛟️ Curious about these products?

I’ve reviewed them below, but if you already want to see them on Amazon:

A Real-World Test on Princess Aurora

I received my NICETY order on February 19, 2026 and tested them for the first time yesterday, directly on a Disney mystery coloring book: Princess Aurora.
I wanted to see what these markers could really do in real conditions, without mixing in other materials. Here is my honest take.

What I Ordered

I invested in several packs to build a complete palette:

  • NICETY 264 colors - flexible brush tip 1-6mm (the big pack)
  • NICETY 32 skin tones - brush tip 1-6mm
  • NICETY 32 skin tones - dual tip 0.5-5mm
  • NICETY 30 colors extra fine 0.7mm - in blue, green, red and grey (4 packs)

I went all in on the brand to really see what it is worth across its full range.

The Color Swatch: A Great Idea

Every box comes with a color swatch. The one included in the smaller 30 and 32-marker packs is particularly well thought out: each color swatch has a hole punched through the center.
In practice, you place the hole directly over the color code on your mystery coloring page, and you can see your color all around it to compare the shade. It is a genuinely clever idea for mystery coloring, where you are often trying to confirm the right color before committing.

NICETY color swatch with holes for mystery coloring
The punched swatch - very useful for mystery coloring

The Brush Tip in Practice

I only used the 1-6mm brush tip for this test. And honestly, since it is flexible and comes to a point, it works everywhere.
Light pressure gives you a precise fine line for small zones and outlines. More pressure fills large areas quickly. Two in one, which is very practical.

Coverage: What to Expect

The lighter the color, the more layers you will need to properly cover the lines and color codes on your coloring page. Expect between 1 and 4 passes depending on the shade.
This is normal for acrylic markers, but worth keeping in mind if you are working on very light zones like skin or off-white areas.

The Skin Tone Problem in the 264-Pack

This is the weak point I discovered while testing on Aurora: the big 264-color pack does not include usable skin tones.
The available options are either too pink or too orange. The same goes for the golden tones of Aurora's crown and necklace, which were hard to match. And the pink of her dress leaned too far toward red on the bodice.
Conclusion: the 264-pack alone is not enough for coloring characters. You will need to add the skin tones pack to get realistic skin shades.

My Aurora Coloring - The Result

I deliberately stuck to the NICETY packs only for this test, without mixing in other materials. The final result is decent but not perfectly faithful to the official solution, especially on the crown and the dress bodice.
That said, the markers themselves perform well. It is not a marker quality issue - it is an incomplete palette for character coloring.

Princess Aurora mystery coloring completed with NICETY acrylic markers
My Aurora, colored with NICETY markers

Compared to Tooli Art

My Tooli Art markers remain the better option in terms of quality. NICETY is a decent cheaper alternative, almost as good, but with a few notable differences.
I get the impression the NICETY markers are less full than the Tooli Art ones - long-term durability remains to be confirmed.
In short: if you want a budget-friendly alternative that does the job well, NICETY is an honest option. If you want the best result without compromise, Tooli Art still has the edge.

My Verdict

NICETY acrylic markers are solid for the price. The brush tip is versatile, the punched color swatch is a genuinely good idea for mystery coloring, and the colors cover well with a few layers.
But if you want to color Disney characters, the 264-pack alone will not be enough: you will need to add the skin tones pack alongside it.
I recommend them as a budget option, but go in with eyes open about their limitations.

The visuals (illustrations, excerpts, photos) shown on this page are used for illustration purposes and remain the property of their respective authors/publishers. Trademarks and names belong to their respective owners. Colorings and photos are by Usako unless stated otherwise. Any reproduction, distribution, or commercial reuse is not allowed without the prior consent of the rights holders.