cosmetics, as an alternative to chemical pigments. [9][10][11][12][13][14][15] To formulate structuralcolor inks, colloidal crystals have been tailored in a format of microbeads or microcapsules using emulsion templating. [5,[16][17][18][19][20] For example, colloidal particles are confined in emulsion droplets and enriched to form a close-packed array in a supraball by depleting the suspension medium through evaporation. [21][22][23][24] The supraballs contain either an onion-like arrangement, icosahedral structure, or single-crystalline structure depending on the rate of enrichment and relative size of supraballs to the particles, [25][26][27][28][29][30] which show pronounced structural colors. The color saturation has been enhanced by employing lightabsorbing additives. [31,32] However, evaporation-induced self-assembly requires a long time of consolidation and delicate conditions. Furthermore, the supraballs have limited mechanical stability due to a lack of interparticle adhesives. To avoid the use of the evaporation process and improve mechanical stability, colloidal particles are carefully dispersed in a photocurable medium to have repulsive interparticle potential, which is emulsified in water to form oil-in-water (O/W) droplets. [9,[33][34][35][36] The interparticle repulsion causes the spontaneous crystallization of particles in the absence of evaporation and the colloidal arrays are permanently stabilized by photopolymerizing the media of emulsion droplets. Therefore, photonic balls with high mechanical stability can be produced without the evaporation process. Nevertheless, color saturation and brightness are insufficient to directly use the photonic balls as colorants in photonic inks or cosmetic products, which is attributed to low crystallinity of colloidal arrays and incoherent scattering at the interface between the balls and suspension medium.Here, we suggest the evaporation-free production of photonic balls with enhanced color saturation and brightness using oil-in-oil (O/O) emulsion templates. With capillary microfluidic devices, monodisperse O/O emulsion droplets are prepared by emulsifying suspension of silica-in-resin in mineral oil containing surfactant. As the resin, poly(ethylene glycol) phenyl ether acrylate (PEGPEA) is selected to form elastic photonic balls, in which silica particles are dispersed at the volume fraction of 33%. Each particle dispersed in Photonic microbeads containing crystalline colloidal arrays are promising as a key component of structural-color inks for various applications including printings, paintings, and cosmetics. However, structural colors from microbeads usually have low color saturation and the production of the beads requires delicate and time-consuming protocols. Herein, elastic photonic microbeads are designed with enhanced color saturation through facile photocuring of oil-in-oil emulsion droplets. Dispersions of highly-concentrated silica particles in elastomer precursors are microfluidically emulsified into immiscible oil to produce monodisperse dr...