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Crayola

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Crayola logo
Crayola logo

Crayola Crayons were first introduced in 1903
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Crayola Crayons were first introduced in 1903

Crayola is a brand of crayons and other writing and drawing utensils, such as markers, chalk, and colored pencils manufactured by Binney & Smith Inc.

It is primarily popular in the United States, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom.

History

Crayola Crayons were invented by cousins Edwin Binney and C. Harold Smith. The word "Crayola" was formed by the wife of Edwin Binney, Alice Binney, who combined the French word for chalk (craie) with "ola" from the word oleaginous, meaning oily. Crayola also means "crayon" in Spanish.

The first box of Binney & Smith crayons, produced in 1903, sold for a nickel and contained eight colors: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, brown, and black. For the next 45 years the color mix and the color names remained unchanged.

In 1949, the choices increased six fold bringing the total in the box to 48 colors; and many of the names for the new crayons were more imaginative those used for the original eight colors and included thistle, periwinkle, carnation pink, bittersweet, cornflower, melon, salmon and spring green.

The first color name change came in 1958 when the name Prussian Blue was changed to Midnight Blue in response to requests from teachers. In the same year additional crayons were added expanding the selection to 64 colors. New colors included Copper, Plum, Lavender, Mulberry, Burnt Orange, Aquamarine and ten other colors sure to spark creativity in a young mind.

In 1962, Binney & Smith chose to change the name Flesh to Peach. In 1999, the name Indian Red was changed to Chestnut.

In 1972 with the addition of eight neon bright crayons: Chartreuse, Ultra Blue, Ultra Orange, Ultra Red, Hot Magenta, Ultra Green, Ultra Pink, and Ultra Yellow.

In 1990 only the name Hot Magenta and the other names were replaced by: Atomic Tangerine, Outrageous Orange, Shocking Pink, Blizzard Blue, Laser Lemon, Screamin’ Green, and Wild Watermelon; Eight additional fluorescents were added: Electric Lime, Purple Pizzazz, Razzle Dazzle Rose, Unmellow Yellow, Magic Mint, Radical Red, Sunglow, and Neon Carrot.

For the first time in 1990, eight colors were retired and replaced by eight new shades. Retired colors enshrined in the Crayola Hall of Fame included: Green Blue, Orange Red, Orange Yellow, Violet Blue, Maize, Lemon Yellow, Blue Gray and Raw Umber. Colors added were Cerulean, Vivid Tangerine, Jungle Green, Fuchsia, Dandelion, Teal Blue, Royal Purple, and Wild Strawberry.

Consumers named 16 new colors in 1993 bring the total to 96 and included Asparagus, Macaroni and Cheese, Razzmatazz, Timber Wolf, Cerise, Mauvelous, Robin's Egg Blue, Tropical Rain Forest, Denim, Pacific Blue, Shamrock, Tumbleweed, Granny Smith Apple, Purple Mountain's Majesty, Tickle Me Pink, and Wisteria.

In 1998 24 new colors were added bringing the total to 120 and the names continue to evolve. Pink Flamingo, Caribbean Green, Fuzzy Wuzzy Brown, Purple Heart, Banana Mania, Cotton Candy, Manatee, Outer Space, Shadow, Pig Pink, Vivid Violet, and Mountain Meadow. Thistle was retired from the 120-count assortment in 2000 to make room for Indigo and Torch Red was renamed Scarlet.

Crayola marked their 100th birthday by having consumers again name new colors and vote four out: Blizzard Blue, Magic Mint, Mulberry, and Teal Blue make way for Inch Worm, Jazzberry Jam, Mango Tango, and Wild Blue Yonder.

Timeline

A timeline of Crayola's history:

Crayola colors

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The colors in the 8, 16, and 24 packs.
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The colors in the 8, 16, and 24 packs.

Crayola crayon packs have come in a variety of sizes from 2 crayons up to 800 for the bulk boxes. The colors contained in a package have ranged from 2 up to 200 (although a 200 color package includes "special effect" crayons such as glitters or neons, etc.). In general, though, the most common packages are multiples of eight: 8, 16, 24, 32, (40), 48, (56), 64, 72, 80, (88), 96, (104), (112), and 120 packs. The 120 pack is sometimes a package composed of two 48 pack containers and a 24 pack container. The most important Crayola crayon colors are the ones that come in the smaller packs since these are most prevalent. In fact there have been 240 pack Crayola Cases that simply house two of the 120 crayon cases, although limited a number of these have been produced since 2005.

Here are the colors in the 8, 16, and 24 packs as of 2005:

8 pack +8 = 16 pack +8 = 24 pack
Black Blue Green Apricot
Blue Blue Violet Cerulean
Brown Carnation Pink Dandelion
Green Red Orange Gray
Orange Red Violet Green Yellow
Red White Indigo
Violet (purple) Yellow Green Scarlet
Yellow Yellow Orange Violet Red

External links

 


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