List of Crayola crayon colors

Last updated

An assortment of crayon boxes produced by Binney & Smith between 1903 and 1920 Crayola1.jpg
An assortment of crayon boxes produced by Binney & Smith between 1903 and 1920

Since the introduction of Crayola drawing crayons by Binney & Smith in 1903, more than 200 colors have been produced in a wide variety of assortments. The table below represents all of the colors found in regular Crayola assortments from 1903 to the present. [lower-alpha 1] Since the introduction of fluorescent crayons in the 1970s, the standard colors have been complemented by a number of specialty crayon assortments, represented in subsequent tables.

Contents

Standard colors

ColorNameHexadecimal in their website depiction [lower-alpha 2] RGBYears in production [2] Notes16-Box24-Box32-Box64-Box120-Box
 Red#ED0A3F23710631903–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Maroon#C3214819533721949–presentKnown as "Dark Red", 1949–1958. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Scarlet#FD0E3525314531998–presentKnown as "Torch Red", 1998. [2] NoYesYesYesYes
 Brick Red#C62D4219845661958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 English Vermilion#CC474B20471751903–1935Also spelled "Vermillion". [2]
 Madder Lake#CC333620451541903–1935
 Permanent Geranium Lake#E12C2C22544441903–circa 1910
 Maximum Red#D9212121733331926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Chestnut#B94E4818578721903–presentKnown as "Indian Red" before 1999. [2] NoNoYesYesYes
 Orange-Red#FF534925583731958–1990
 Sunset Orange#FE4C4025476641997–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Bittersweet#FE6F5E254111941958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Dark Venetian Red#B33B2417959361903–circa 1910"Venetian Red, Dark" on labels. [2]
 Venetian Red#CC553D20485611903–1944
 Light Venetian Red#E6735C230115921903–circa 1910"Venetian Red, Light" on labels. [2]
 Vivid Tangerine#FF99802551531281990–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Middle Red#E58E732291421151926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Burnt Orange#FF7034255112521958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Red-Orange#FF3F3425563521930–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Orange#FF8833255136511903–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Macaroni and Cheese#FFB97B2551851231993–presentAlso found as "Macaroni & Cheese" and "Macaroni-n-Cheese". [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Middle Yellow Red#ECAC762361721181926–1944, 1949–1958Part of the Munsell line, 1926–1944. Same color as "Medium Orange" (1949–1958). [2]
 Mango Tango#E7720023111402003–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Yellow-Orange#FFAE42255174661930–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Maximum Yellow Red#F2BA49242186731926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Banana Mania#FBE7B22512311781998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Maize#F2C649242198731903–1990Known as "Gold Ochre", 1903–1958. "Golden Ochre" on some labels. [2]
 Orange-Yellow#F8D5682482131041958–1990
 Goldenrod#FCD6672522141031903–presentKnown as "Medium Chrome Yellow" (1903–?) and "Medium Yellow" (1903–1958). [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Dandelion#FED85D254216931990–2017 [2] [3] [4]
 Yellow#FBE8702512321121903–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Green-Yellow#F1E7882412311361958–presentNoYesYesYesYes
 Middle Yellow#FFEB0025523501926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Olive Green#B5B35C181179921903–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Spring Green#ECEBBD2362351891958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Maximum Yellow#FAFA37250250551926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Canary#FFFF992552551531998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Lemon Yellow#FFFF9F2552551591903–1990Also known as "Light Chrome Yellow" ("Chrome Yellow, Light" on labels) or "Light Yellow", 1903–1958. "Chrome Yellow, Light" on labels. [2]
 Maximum Green Yellow#D9E650217230801926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Middle Green Yellow#ACBF60172191961926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Inchworm#B0E313176227192003–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Light Chrome Green#BEE64B190230751903–1935"Chrome Green, Light" on labels. Same color as "Light Green" (1903–1935). [2]
 Yellow-Green#C5E17A1972251221930–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Maximum Green#5E8C3194140491926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Asparagus#7BA05B123160911993–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Granny Smith Apple#9DE0931572241471993–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Fern#63B76C991831081998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Middle Green#4D8C5777140871926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Green#01A6381166561903–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Medium Chrome Green#6CA67C1081661241903–1939"Chrome Green, Medium" on labels. Produced 1903–1939. Same color as "Medium Green" (1903–1939). [2]
 Forest Green#5FA777951671191949–presentKnown as "Dark Green", 1949–1958. [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Sea Green#93DFB81472231841949–presentKnown as "Light Green", 1949–1958. [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Shamrock#33CC99512041531993–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Mountain Meadow#1AB385261791331998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Jungle Green#29AB87411711351990–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Caribbean Green#00CC9902041531997–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Tropical Rain Forest#00755E0117941993–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Middle Blue Green#8DD9CC1412172041926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Pine Green#01796F11211111903–1949, 1958–presentKnown as "Dark Chrome Green" ("Chrome Green, Dark" on labels) or "Dark Green", 1903–1949. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Maximum Blue Green#30BFBF481911911926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Robin's Egg Blue#00CCCC02042041993–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Teal Blue#00808001281281990–2003
 Light Blue#8FD8D81432162161958
 Aquamarine#458B74691391161949–presentKnown as "Light Turquoise Blue", 1949–1958. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Turquoise Blue#6CDAE71082182311935–presentAvailable only in bulk, 1935–1949. [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Outer Space#2D383A4556581998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Sky Blue#76D7EA1182152341958–presentNoNoYesYesYes
 Middle Blue#7ED4E61262122301926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Blue-Green#0095B701491831949–presentKnown as "Middle Blue-Green", 1949–1958. [2] YesYesYesYesYes
 Pacific Blue#009DC401571961993–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Cerulean#02A4D321642111990–presentNoYesYesYesYes
 Maximum Blue#47ABCC711712041926–1958Part of the Munsell line, 1926–1944. Also known as "Blue-Green", 1930–1958. [2]
 Blue (I)#2EB4E6461802301903–1958Known as "Celestial Blue", 1935–1949, and "Azure Blue", 1949–1958. [2]
 Cerulean Blue#339ACC511542041949–1958
 Cornflower#93CCEA1472042341958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Green-Blue#2887C8401352001958–1990
 Midnight Blue#0033660511021903–presentKnown as "Prussian Blue", 1903–1958. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Navy Blue#0066CC01022041958–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Denim#1560BD21961891993–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Blue (III)#0066FF01022551949–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Cadet Blue#A9B2C31691781951958–presentNoNoYesYesYes
 Periwinkle#C3CDE61952052301958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Blue (II)#4570E6691122301935–1958Known as "Medium Blue", 1949–1958. [2]
 Bluetiful#3C69E7601052312017–present [5] NoYesYesYesYes
 Wild Blue Yonder#7A89B81221371842003–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Indigo#4F69C6791051981999–presentNoYesYesYesYes
 Manatee#8D90A11411441611998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Cobalt Blue#8C90C81401442001903–1958
 Celestial Blue#7070CC1121122041903–circa 1910
 Blue Bell#9999CC1531532041998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Maximum Blue Purple#ACACE61721722301926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Violet-Blue#766EC81181102001903–circa 1910, 1930–1990Known as "Blue-Violet", 1930–1958. [2]
 Blue-Violet#6456B7100861831949–presentKnown as "Violet" 1949–1958. [2] YesYesYesYesYes
 Ultramarine Blue#3F26BF63381911903–1944
 Middle Blue Purple#8B72BE1391141901926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Purple Heart#652DC1101451931998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Royal Purple#6B3FA0107631601990–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Violet (II)#8359A3131891631930–1949, 1958–present"Violet (Purple)" on labels. [2] YesYesYesYesYes
 Medium Violet#8F47B3143711791949–1958
 Wisteria#C9A0DC2011602201993–presentNoNoYesYesYes
 Lavender (I)#BF8FCC1911432041949–1958
 Vivid Violet#803790128551441997–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Maximum Purple#733380115511281926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Purple Mountains' Majesty#D6AEDD2141742211993–presentAlso found as "Purple Mountain Majesty" and "Purple Mountain's Majesty." [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Fuchsia#C154C1193841931990–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Pink Flamingo#F2583E24288621997–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Violet (I)#732E6C115461081903–1930Also known as "Purple" (1903–circa 1914). [2]
 Brilliant Rose#E667CE2301032061949–1958
 Orchid#E29CD22261562101949–presentKnown as "Medium Red-Violet", 1949–1958. [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Plum#843179132491211958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Medium Rose#D96CBE2171081901949–1958
 Thistle#D8BFD82161912161949–1999Known as "Light Magenta", 1949–1958. [2]
 Mulberry#C8509B200801551958–2003
 Red-Violet#BB3385187511331930–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Middle Purple#D982B52171301811926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Maximum Red Purple#A63A79166581211926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Jazzberry Jam#A50B5E16511942003–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Eggplant#6140519764811998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Magenta#F653A6246831661903–presentSame color as "Permanent Magenta" (1903–?). [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Cerise#DA3287218501351993–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Wild Strawberry#FF3399255511531990–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Lavender (II)#FBAED22511742101958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Cotton Candy#FFB7D52551832131998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Carnation Pink#FFA6C92551662011903–presentKnown as "Rose Pink" (1903–1958) and "Pink" (1903–1917). [2] YesYesYesYesYes
 Violet-Red#F7468A247701381958–presentNoYesYesYesYes
 Razzmatazz#E30B5C22711921993–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Piggy Pink#FDD7E42532152281998–presentOriginally called "Pig Pink."NoNoNoNoYes
 Carmine#E62E6B230461071935–1958Known as "Carmine Red", 1949–1958. [2]
 Blush#DB5079219801211998–presentKnown as "Cranberry", 1998–2005. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Tickle Me Pink#FC80A52521281651993–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Mauvelous#F091A92401451691993–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Salmon#FF91A42551451641949–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Middle Red Purple#A5535316583831926–1944Part of the Munsell line. [2]
 Mahogany#CA343520252531949–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Melon#FEBAAD2541861731958–presentNoNoYesYesYes
 Pink Sherbert#F7A38E2471631421998–presentKnown as "Brink Pink", 1998–2005. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Burnt Sienna#E97451233116811903–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Brown#AF593E17589621903–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Sepia#9E5B4015891641935–1944, 1958–presentAvailable only in bulk, 1935–1939. [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Fuzzy Wuzzy#87421F13566311998–presentKnown as "Fuzzy Wuzzy Brown", 1998–2005. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Beaver#926F5B146111911998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Tumbleweed#DEA6812221661291993–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Raw Sienna#D27D46210125701958–presentNoNoNoYesYes
 Van Dyke Brown#66422810266401903–1910Same color as "Brown" (1903–1910). [2]
 Tan#FA9D5A250157901958–presentNoNoYesYesYes
 Desert Sand#EDC9AF2372011751998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Peach#FFCBA42552031641903–presentKnown as "Flesh Tint" (1903–1949), "Flesh" (1949–1956, 1958–1962), and "Pink Beige" (1956–1958). [2] NoNoYesYesYes
 Burnt Umber#80553312885511903–1944
 Apricot#FDD5B12532131771958–presentNoYesYesYesYes
 Almond#EED9C42382171961998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Raw Umber#66523310282511903–1990
 Shadow#837050131112801998–presentNoNoNoNoYes
 Raw Sienna (I)#E6BC5C230188921903–circa 1910
 Gold (I)#92926E1461461101903–1944Metallic; swatch represents nominal hue only. Available only in bulk after 1915. [2]
 Gold (II)#E6BE8A2301901381953–presentMetallic; swatch represents nominal hue only. Available only in bulk, 1953–1956. [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Silver#C9C0BB2011921871903–presentMetallic; swatch represents nominal hue only. Available only in bulk, 1915–1944. [2] NoNoNoYesYes
 Copper#DA8A672181381031903–1915, 1958–presentMetallic; swatch represents nominal hue only. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Antique Brass#C88A652001381011998–presentMetallic; swatch represents nominal hue only. [2] NoNoNoNoYes
 Black#0000000001903–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Charcoal Gray#736A62115106981903–1910
 Gray#8B86801391341281926–presentAs "Middle Grey", part of the Munsell line, 1926–1944. Spelled "Grey" on labels, but "Gray" on boxes. Also called "Neutral Grey", 1930–1956. [2] NoYesYesYesYes
 Blue-Gray#C8C8CD2002002051958–1990
 Timberwolf#D9D6CF2172142071993–presentNoNoYesYesYes
 White#FFFFFF2552552551903–presentYesYesYesYesYes
 Crayellow#F1D651 [6] 241214812021, 2022The color was introduced for Colors of Kindness. [7] NoNoNoNoNo
 Cool Mint#DDEBEC [6] 2212352362021, 2022The color was introduced for Colors of Kindness. [7] NoNoNoNoNo
 Oatmeal#D9DAD2 [6] 2172182102021, 2022The color was introduced for Colors of Kindness. [7] NoNoNoNoNo
 Powder Blue#C0D5F0 [6] 1922132402021, 2022The color was introduced for Colors of Kindness. [7] NoNoNoNoNo

Specialty crayons

Along with the regular packs of crayons, there have been many specialty sets, including Silver Swirls, [8] Gem Tones, [9] Pearl Brite Crayons, [10] Metallic FX Crayons, [11] Magic Scent Crayons, [12] Silly Scents, [13] and more.

Fluorescent crayons

In 1972, Binney & Smith introduced eight Crayola fluorescent crayons, designed to fluoresce under black light. The following year, they were added to the 72-count box, which had previously contained two of the eight most-used colors, in place of the duplicate crayons. These crayons remained steady until 1990, when all eight were renamed, and eight more were added, for a total of 16 fluorescent crayons. One of the new colors, Hot Magenta, shared a name with one of the original colors, now Razzle Dazzle Rose. For some reason, two of the original eight fluorescent crayons have the same color as two of the newer crayons. In 1992, the fluorescent colors were added to the new No. 96 box, becoming part of the standard lineup. When four new crayons were added to the No. 96 assortment in 2003, four existing colors were discontinued, including two of the fluorescents. Also beginning in 1993, packs of fluorescent crayons were regularly labeled "neon" or "neons". [2]

ColorNameHexadecimalRGBNotes
 Radical Red#FF355E [1] 2555394Introduced in 1990.
 Wild Watermelon#FD5B78 [1] 25391120Same color as "Ultra Red" (1972–1990).
 Outrageous Orange#FF6037 [1] 2559655Same color as "Ultra Orange" (1972–1990).
 Atomic Tangerine#FF9966 [1] 255153102Same color as "Ultra Yellow" (1972–1990).
 Neon Carrot#FF9933 [1] 25515351Introduced in 1990.
 Sunglow#FFCC33 [1] 25520451Introduced in 1990.
 Laser Lemon#FFFF66 [1] 255255102Same color as "Chartreuse" (1972–1990).
 Unmellow Yellow#FFFF66 [1] [lower-alpha 3] 255255102Introduced in 1990.
 Electric Lime#CCFF00 [1] 2042550Introduced in 1990.
 Screamin' Green#66FF66 [1] 102255102Same color as "Ultra Green" (1972–1990).
 Magic Mint#AAF0D1170240209Produced 1990–2003.
 Blizzard Blue#50BFE680191230Same color as "Ultra Blue" (1972–1990). Retired in 2003.
 Shocking Pink#FF6EFF [1] 255110255Same color as "Ultra Pink" (1972–1990).
 Razzle Dazzle Rose#EE34D223852210Same color as "Hot Magenta" (1972–1990).
 Hot Magenta#FF00CC [1] [lower-alpha 4] 2550204Introduced in 1990.
 Purple Pizzazz#FF00BB [1] [lower-alpha 5] 2550187Introduced in 1990.

Fabric Crayons

In 1976, Crayola released a pack of eight Fabric Crayons. [2] Each crayon was named after a standard color. In 1980, "Light Blue" was discontinued and replaced with Black. The colors' hexadecimal values are currently unknown. The names of the colors are listed below:

black
blue
burnt sienna
green
light blue
magenta
orange
violet
yellow

Metallic Crayons (Canada)

In 1987, Crayola released a pack of 16 Metallic Crayons in Canada. [2] Four of the colors are named after four of the standard colors. Also, one of the colors is named before a Metallic FX color. The colors' hexadecimal values are currently unknown. The names of the colors are listed below:

Silver Swirls

16 of the 24 Silver Swirls colors Silverswirlss.png
16 of the 24 Silver Swirls colors

In 1990, Crayola released Silver Swirls, a pack of 24 silvery colors. The colors' hexadecimal values are approximated below. [14] [ permanent dead link ]

ColorNameHexadecimalRGB
Rusty Red#DA2C432184467
Copper Penny#AD6F69173111105
Burnished Brown#A17A74161122116
Aztec Gold#C3995319515383
Misty Moss#BBB477187180119
Shiny Shamrock#5FA77895167120
Polished Pine#5DA49393164147
Wintergreen Dream#56887D86136125
Green Sheen#6EAEA1110174161
Steel Teal#5F8A8B95138139
Pewter Blue#8BA8B7139168183
Cerulean Frost#6D9BC3109155195
Shadow Blue#778BA5119139165
Cosmic Cobalt#2E2D884645136
Glossy Grape#AB92B3171146179
Lilac Luster#AE98AA174152170
Pearly Purple#B768A2183104162
Sugar Plum#914E7514578117
Mystic Maroon#AD437917367121
Twilight Lavender#8A496B13873107
Cinnamon Satin#CD607E20596126
Rose Dust#9E5E6F15894111
Quick Silver#A6A6A6166166166
Granite Gray#676767103103103

Multicultural Crayons

In 1992, Crayola released a set of eight Multicultural Crayons which "come in an assortment of skin hues that give a child a realistic palette for coloring their world." [15] The eight colors used came from their standard list of colors (none of these colors are exclusive to this set), and the set was, for the most part, well received, though there has also been some criticism. [16]

ColorNameHexadecimalRGBNotes
 Apricot#FDD5B1 [1] 253213177Produced 1958–present. [2]
 Black#000000 [1] 000Produced 1903–present. [2]
 Burnt Sienna#E97451 [1] 23311681Produced 1903–present. [2]
 Mahogany#CA3435 [1] 2025253Produced 1949–present. [2]
 Peach#FFCBA4 [1] 255203164Produced 1903–present. Known as "Flesh Tint" (1903–1949), "Flesh" (1949–1956, 1958–1962), and "Pink Beige" (1956–1958). [2]
 Sepia#9E5B40 [1] 1589164Produced 1935–1944, 1958–present. Available only in bulk, 1935–1949. [2]
 TanProduced 1958–present. [2]
 White#FFFFFF [1] 255255255Produced 1903–present. [2]

Magic Scent Crayons

16 of the 30 Crayola Magic Scent Crayons (showing Leather Jacket, Dirt, Fresh Air, Eucalyptus, Baby Powder, Shampoo, Rose, Daffodil, Smoke, Lumber, Cedar Chest, Lilac, New Car, Tulip, Soap, and Pine) Crayonscent.png
16 of the 30 Crayola Magic Scent Crayons (showing Leather Jacket, Dirt, Fresh Air, Eucalyptus, Baby Powder, Shampoo, Rose, Daffodil, Smoke, Lumber, Cedar Chest, Lilac, New Car, Tulip, Soap, and Pine)

In 1994, Crayola produced a 16-pack of crayons that released fragrances when used. In 1995, Crayola changed some of the scents because of complaints received from parents that some of the crayons smelled good enough to eat, like the Cherry, Chocolate, and Blueberry scented crayons. [17] Crayons with food scents were retired in favor of non-food scents. The 30 crayons all consisted of regular Crayola colors. [2]

ColorName of ScentName of Crayola Color UsedHexadecimalRGB
RoseRed#ED0A3F2371063
Cedar ChestMahogany#CA34352025253
ChocolateBrown#AF593E1758962
DirtSepia#9E5B401589164
Jelly BeanOrange#FF883325513651
OrangeOrange#FF883325513651
TulipOrange#FF883325513651
PeachPeach#FFCBA4255203164
LumberApricot#FDD5B1253213177
BananaDandelion#FED85D25421693
LemonYellow#FBE870251232112
DaffodilYellow#FBE870251232112
LimeYellow Green#C5E17A197225122
EucalyptusJungle Green#29AB8741171135
PinePine Green#01796F1121111
Fresh AirSky Blue#76D7EA118215234
New CarBlue (III)#0066FF0102255
SoapPeriwinkle#C3CDE6195205230
BlueberryBlue (II)#4570E669112230
GrapeViolet#8359A313189163
LilacWisteria#C9A0DC201160220
StrawberryWild Strawberry#FF339925551153
ShampooCarnation Pink#FFA6C9255166201
Bubble GumTickle Me Pink#FC80A5252128165
CherryMaroon#C321481953372
CoconutWhite#FFFFFF255255255
Baby PowderWhite#FFFFFF255255255
SmokeGray#8B8680139134128
LicoriceBlack#000000000
Leather JacketBlack#000000000

Gem Tones

All 16 Crayola Gem Tones crayon colors Gemtones.png
All 16 Crayola Gem Tones crayon colors

In 1994, Crayola released Gem Tones, a pack of 16 crayons modeled after the colors of gemstones. The colors' hexadecimal values are approximated below:

ColorNameHexadecimalRGB
Jasper#D053402088364
Smokey Topaz#832A0D1314213
Citrine#933709147559
Tiger's Eye#B5691718110523
Peridot#ABAD4817117372
Jade#469A8470154132
Emerald#14A98920169137
Malachite#46949670148150
Moonstone#3AA8C158168193
Sapphire#2D5DA14593161
Lapis Lazuli#436CB967108185
Amethyst#64609A10096154
Rose Quartz#BD559C18985156
Ruby#AA406917064105
Pink Pearl#B07080176112128
Onyx#353839535657

Glow in the Dark Crayons

In 1994, Crayola released Glow in the Dark Crayons, a pack of eight crayons. However, it did not contain any color names in North America. Only four of the colors were available in the U.K.

Crayola Changeables

All six Crayola Changeables crayons with color changer Changeables.png
All six Crayola Changeables crayons with color changer

The Crayola Changeables crayons were introduced in 1995. The chart [18] includes the color changer, an off-white crayon that goes on clear and initiates the color changes in the other crayons from the "From color" to the "To color".

From
color
NameHexadecimalTo
color
NameHexadecimalRGB
Blue#C0E7F1Magenta#EB58DD23588221
Green#91E351Violet#963D7F15061127
Orange#FF8071Black#000000000
Pink#FF8ABAYellow#FFF7CC255247204
Red#F4405DBlue#1313911919145
Yellow#FDFD07Green#4F79487912172
Color Changer#FFE9D1255233209

Color 'n Smell Crayons

Following previous issues with scented crayons in 1994 and 1995, Binney & Smith released a new line, known as "Magic Scent" crayons in 1997. None of the crayons were named after or given the scent of foods. The 16 crayons all consisted of regular Crayola colors. [2]

ColorName of ScentName of Crayola ColorHexadecimalRGB
EarthwormBrick Red#C62D421984566
Smell the RosesRed#ED0A3F2371063
Pet ShopBrown#AF593E1758962
Baseball MittBurnt Sienna#E9745123311681
Grandma's PerfumeOrange#FF883325513651
Saw DustPeach#FFCBA4255203164
Sharpening PencilsGoldenrod#FCD667252214103
Wash the DogDandelion#FED85D25421693
Sunny DayYellow#FBE870251232112
Koala TreeJungle Green#29AB8741171135
Pine TreePine Green#01796F1121111
Fresh AirSky Blue#76D7EA118215234
Flower ShopWisteria#C9A0DC201160220
Bubble BathTickle Me Pink#FC80A5252128165
Baby's PowderWhite#FFFFFF255255255
New SneakersBlack#000000000

Star Brite Crayons

In 1997, Crayola released a 16-pack of Star Brite Crayons. However, it did not contain any color names. The hex triplets below are representative of the colors produced by the named crayons.

ColorHexadecimalRGB
#F898C8248152200
#E91E632333099
#D625182143724
#AD000017300
#FA7A002501220
#CDDC3920522057
#00D8A00216160
#1BA77B27167123
#004C71076113
#1AADE026173224
#0069BD0105189
#3333995151153
#56418C8665140
#212321333533
#E63300230510
#DE69002221050

Color Mix-Up Crayons

In 1997, Crayola released a 16-pack of Color Mix-Up Crayons, each of which contains a solid color with flecks of two other colors in it. Colors in the chart below are approximated. [19] The hex RGB values are in the order of the predominant color and then the flecks. Colors for crayons other than Mixed Veggies and Star Spangled Banner come from information on the crayon wrapper.

Crayon nameCrayon nameCrayon nameCrayon name
PrimeOther1Other2PrimeOther1Other2PrimeOther1Other2PrimeOther1Other2
Baby's BlanketBlazing BonfireCool and CrazyLemon Lime Zing
#FF8ABA#1F75FE#1CAC78#FCE883#FF7538#EE204D#FFFFFF#7851A9#0D98BA#FCE883#1CAC78#1F75FE
Magenta Mix-UpMixed VeggiesOff-RoadPeaches 'n Cream
#FCB4D5#1F75FE#C8385A#B6B650#BD0B4C#F2DD87#DEAA88#2B6CC4#C8385A#FFFFFF#FFCFAB#FCE883
RainforestShrimp CocktailSouthwestStar Spangled Banner
#6DAE81#5D76CB#7851A9#FFFFFF#FF7538#C8385A#FFFFFF#FF7538#5D76CB#F8EFE6#1F75FE#EE204D
StonewashedSurf's UpTwisterWarm and Fuzzy
#80DAEB#2B6CC4#C8385A#FFFFFF#1CA9C9#FCE883#FFFFFF#1CAC78#FF7538#FF8ABA#FF7538#1F75FE

Pearl Brite Crayons

Crayola Pearl Brite Crayons, Color Mix-Up, and Crayons with Glitter Crayons-pbcm.png
Crayola Pearl Brite Crayons, Color Mix-Up, and Crayons with Glitter

In 1997, Crayola released a 16-pack of Pearl Brite Crayons. [20] These were designed to give soft pearlescent colors. These had a new wrapper design, black with a white oval Crayola logo and white text.

ColorNameHexadecimalRGB
Salmon Pearl#F1444A2416874
Mandarin Pearl#F37A4824312272
Sunset Pearl#F1CC79241204121
Sunny Pearl#F2F27A242242122
Key Lime Pearl#E8F48C232244140
Caribbean Green Pearl#6ADA8E106218142
Ocean Green Pearl#48BF9172191145
Turquoise Pearl#3BBCD059188208
Aqua Pearl#5FBED795190215
Black Coral Pearl#54626F8498111
Ocean Blue Pearl#4F42B57966181
Midnight Pearl#70267011238112
Orchid Pearl#7B42591236689
Mystic Pearl#D6528221482130
Rose Pearl#F0386524056101
Cultured Pearl#F5F5F5245245245

Crayons with Glitter

In 1997, Crayola released Crayons with Glitter as part of a Special Effects crayons package. Starting as late as 1999, their crayon names do not appear on the crayon wrappers. [21]

Primary ColorPrimary HexadecimalPrimary

R

Primary

G

Primary

B

Glitter ColorGlitter HexadecimalGlitter RGlitter GGlitter BName
#EE204D2383277#CDC5C2205197194Red with Shimmering Silver Glitter
#FF753825511756#77DDE7119221231Orange with Twinkling Turquoise Glitter
#FCE883252232131RainbowYellow with Rainbow Glitter
#C5E384197227132#CDC5C2205197194Yellow Green with Silver Glitter
#1CAC7828172120#77DDE7119221231Green with Twinkling Turquoise Glitter
#0D98BA13152186#E7C697231198151Blue Green with Glitzy Gold Glitter
#80DAEB128218235#E7C697231198151Sky Blue with Glitzy Gold Glitter
#1F75FE31117254#CDC5C2205197194Blue with Shimmering Silver Glitter
#7851A912081169#EE204D2383277Royal Purple with Ruby Red Glitter
#E6A8D7230168215#77DDE7119221231Orchid with Twinkling Turquoise Glitter
#C0448F19268143#E7C697231198151Red Violet with Glitzy Gold Glitter
#FFAACC255170204#FCB4D5252180213Carnation Pink with Lavender Glitter
#C8385A2005690#E7C697231198151Maroon with Glitzy Gold Glitter
#FFFFFF255255255RainbowWhite with Rainbow Glitter
#FFFFFF255255255#E7C697231198151White with Glitzy Gold Glitter
#000000000#E7C697231198151Black with Glitzy Gold Glitter

In 2019, Crayola released an updated version of Crayons with Glitter in a 24-count pack featuring new names:

 black gold  blue blazes  lavender burst 
 shredded cheddar  golden dust  aqua fizz 
 gritty green  maroon mist  confetti sunset 
 campfire flicker  orchid explosion  crimson clash 
 night sky  red slaw  tropical shower 
 poppin' purple  fire in the sky  flamingo flame 
 chocolate sprinkles  diamond dazzle  gray glam 
 sun shower  wild wasabi  silver sparks 

Construction Paper Crayons

In 1998, Crayola introduced Construction Paper Crayons. The specialty line remained one of the longest running specialty lines they ever put out. [22] The hex triplets below are representative of the colors produced by the named crayons.

ColorHexadecimalRGB
#FFA3B1255163177
#F3715A24311390
#F37B70243123112
#FFAD5925517389
#FFE599255229153
#F8FC98248252152
#B4FFB4180255180
#12E3DB18227219
#00BCD40188212
#03A9F43169244
#4848FF7272255
#6A35CE10653206
#AA55AA17085170
#7F7FBF127127191
#7955481218572
#FFFFFF255255255

Metallic FX Crayons

All 16 Crayola Metallic FX crayon colors Crayonsmetal.png
All 16 Crayola Metallic FX crayon colors

In 2001, Crayola produced Metallic FX Crayons, a set of 16 metallic crayons whose names were chosen through a contest open to residents of the U.S. and Canada. [23] The hex triplets below are representative of the colors produced by the named crayons. [24] In 2019, an updated version was released under its original name of Metallic Crayons, adding eight more metallic colors for a total of 24. The original 16 colors are included in the special 152-count Ultimate Crayon Collection pack alongside 120 standard and 16 Crayons with Glitter. Four of the colors are included in the regular 96-count crayon box.

Metallic FX crayons
ColorNameHexadecimalRGBPack AddedNotes
 Alloy Orange#C462101969816
 B'dazzled Blue#2E58944688148
 Big Dip O' Ruby#9C2542156376696
 Bittersweet Shimmer#BF4F511917981
 Blast Off Bronze#A57164165113100
 Cyber Grape#58427C886612496
 Deep Space Sparkle#4A646C74100108
 Gold Fusion#85754E13311778
 Illuminating Emerald#31917749145119
 Metallic Seaweed#0A7E8C10126140
 Robot Canary#9C7C3815612456Known as "Metallic Sunburst" (2001–2019).
 Razzmic Berry#8D4E8514178133
 Sheen Green#8FD400143212096
 Shimmering Blush#D98695217134149
 Sonic Silver#757575117117117
 Steel Blue#0081AB012917196
 Cheese Grater#C89F5620015986Introduced in 2019.
 Iron Indigo#184FA12479161
 Magnetic Magenta#BF398119157129
 Cobalt Cool#028AAE2138174
 Acid Wash Jeans#5CB2C592178197
 Petrified Forest#005B3909157
 Rose Gold#C88CA4200140164
 Gold Medal#C5BC4219718866

Gel FX Crayons

In 2001, Crayola produced Gel FX Crayons. However, it did not contain any color names. Four of the colors are randomly included in the 96-count crayon box alongside four Metallic FX colors and are not included in the 152-count Ultimate Crayon Collection set. The hex triplets below are representative of the colors produced by the named crayons.

15 of the 16 Crayola Gel FX Crayons Gel FX Crayons.jpg
15 of the 16 Crayola Gel FX Crayons
ColorHexadecimalRGBPack Added
#FF33992555115396
#FF6699255102153
#F26D7D242109125
#F5834524513169
#FFBF7F255191127
#F5FF7D24525512596
#99FF99153255153
#12E3DB18227219
#00B6BD018218996
#0081FF012925596
#7092BE112146190
#3F48CC6372204
#7853A812083168
#A349A416373164
#8F587314388115
#FFFFFF255255255

Pearl Crayons

In 2019, a 24-count box of Pearl Crayons was released alongside the updated versions of the Metallic Crayons, Neon Crayons, and Crayons with Glitter. [25]

ColorNameHexadecimalRGB
Antique Gray#9F9F9F159159159
Apple Orchard#BF3F3F1916363
Berry Parfait#A4348216452130
Black Pearl#3A3A3A585858
Bubble Gum#DF9ACA223154202
Butternut Squash#E74F00231790
Caribbean Sea#67CD95103205149
Cloudy Sky#548CD084140208
Hot Cocoa#8F482F1437247
Iridescent Indigo#3C32CD6050205
Lavender Silk#6B4D8210777130
Leafy Canopy#94DDCB148221203
Liquid Gold#FFD966255217102
Mango Purée#FF61372559755
Moonlit Pond#4F2CD07944208
Ocean Foam#62C9D398201211
Orange Peel#FF802125512833
Pesto#5F7B4A9512374
Pink Luster#FFB2E7255178231
Red Satin#9F34341595252
Sea Glass#C4EA7F196234127
Shooting Star#FFFF65255255101
Snow Drift#F3F3F3243243243
Sunset Shimmer#F7901524714421

Neon Crayons

In 2019, a new 24 count of Neon Crayons was released. It includes eight fluorescent colors, eight pearl versions of the same colors, and the same eight colors with silver glitter.

Sky BlueScreamin' GreenSunglowWild WatermelonPurple PizzazzLaser LemonAtomic TangerineShocking Pink
Pearl Sky BluePearl Screamin' GreenPearl SunglowPearl Wild WatermelonPearl Purple PizzazzPearl Laser LemonPearl Atomic TangerinePearl Shocking Pink
 Glitter Sky Blue  Glitter Screamin' Green  Glitter Sunglow  Glitter Wild Watermelon  Glitter Purple Pizzazz  Glitter Laser Lemon  Glitter Atomic Tangerine  Glitter Shocking Pink 

Colors of the World Crayons

On May 21, 2020, the Colors of the World Crayons were announced. [26] [27] They were released in 32 and 24-count boxes in July 2020. [28] [29] The additional eight colors are standard colors with new names to fit the theme.

ColorNameHexadecimalRGBBoxes
Deep Almond#986A5A1521069024
Deep Golden#8D5B28141914024
Deep Rose#B86F6918411110524
Deepest Almond#51352981534124
Extra Deep Almond#6E5046110807024
Extra Deep Golden#5F452E95694624
Extra Deep Rose#6C4D4B108777524
Extra Light Almond#EEE6CF23823020724
Light Almond#E6B9B323018517924
Light Golden#EDDBC723721919924
Light Medium Almond#E0B5A422418116424
Light Medium Golden#F0C9A224020116224
Light Medium Rose#F4AFB224417517824
Light Rose#FAC7C325019919524
Medium Almond#D19C7D20915612524
Medium Deep Almond#AC806517212810124
Medium Deep Golden#A16B4F1611077924
Medium Deep Rose#EE8E9923814215324
Medium Golden#DEA26C22216210824
Very Deep Almond#88605E136969424
Very Deep Rose#8F6C6814310810424
Very Light Almond#E6D2D323021021124
Very Light Golden#F0DFCF24022320724
Very Light Rose#F7E1E324722522724
Black Hair#00000000032
Blonde Hair#FFFF9925525515332
Blue Eyes#6CDAE710821823132
Brown Eyes#AF593E175896232
Brown Hair#9E5B40158916432
Green Eyes#7BA05B1231609132
Hazel Eyes#D27D462101257032
Red Hair#CA3435202525332

Silly Scents Crayons

All 16 Crayola Silly Scents Crayons Crayons-silly.png
All 16 Crayola Silly Scents Crayons

The Silly Scents Crayons are produced by Crayola in a 16-pack. The 16 crayons all consisted of regular Crayola colors. [2]

ColorScent NameColor NameHexadecimalRGB
 Alien ArmpitYellow Green#C5E17A197225122
 Big Foot FeetTan#D99A6C217154108
 Booger BusterSpring Green#ECEBBD236235189
 Dingy DungeonMaroon#C321481953372
 Gargoyle GasDandelion#FED85D25421693
 Giant's ClubChestnut#B94E481857872
 Magic PotionRed#ED0A3F2371063
 Mummy's TombGray#8B8680139134128
 Ogre OdorRed Orange#FF681F25510431
 Pixie PowderBlue Violet#6456B710086183
 Princess PerfumeTickle Me Pink#FC80A5252128165
 Sasquatch SocksViolet Red#F7468A24770138
 Sea SerpentRobin's Egg Blue#00CCCC0204204
 Smashed PumpkinOrange#FF883325513651
 Sunburnt CyclopsMango Tango#E772002311140
 Winter WizardSky Blue#76D7EA118215234

Heads 'n Tails Crayons

All 16 Crayola Heads 'n Tails crayon colors Crayolaht.png
All 16 Crayola Heads 'n Tails crayon colors

The eight Heads 'n Tails Crayons are double-sided and encased in plastic tubes that function much like the ones on Crayola Twistables. Each crayon has two shades of color, for a total of 16 colors, which are approximated by the background colors and hex RGB values below. [30]

ColorHexadecimalNameNameHexadecimalRGBColor
#FF3855Sizzling RedRed Salsa#FD3A4A2535874
#FB4D46Tart OrangeOrange Soda#FA5B3D2509161
#FFAA1DBright YellowYellow Sunshine#FFF7002552470
#299617Slimy GreenGreen Lizard#A7F43216724450
#2243B6Denim BlueBlue Jeans#5DADEC93173236
#5946B2Plump PurplePurple Plum#9C51B615681182
#A83731Sweet BrownBrown Sugar#AF6E4D17511077
#1B1B1BEerie BlackBlack Shadows#BFAFB2191175178

The 100,000,000,000th Crayon

In 1996, Crayola celebrated the creation of their 100 billionth crayon by publishing a Crayon called Blue Ribbon. This crayon was only present in certain crayon 96-packs. [31]

ColorCrayonLifetimeHexadecimalRGB
Blue Ribbon1996#0B10A21116162

Twistables

24-pack Mini Twistables

In 2004, Crayola released a set of 24 Mini Twistables crayons. They are nearly half the size of large twistable crayons. The colors' hexadecimal values are shown below. The colors are from the standard list of crayon colors.

ColorNameHexadecimalRGB
 Apricot#FDD9B5253217181
 Black#000000000
 Blue#1F75FE31117254
 Blue Green#0D98BA13152186
 Blue Violet#7366BD115102189
 Brown#B4674D18010377
 Carnation Pink#FFAACC255170204
 Cerulean#1DACD629172214
 Dandelion#FDDB6D253219109
 Gray#95918C149145140
 Green#1CAC7828172120
 Green Yellow#F0E891240232145
 Indigo#5D76CB93118203
 Orange#FF753825511756
 Red#EE204D2383277
 Red Orange#FF53492558373
 Red Violet#C0448F19268143
 Scarlet#FC28472524071
 Violet (Purple)#926EAE146110174
 Violet Red#F7539424783148
 White#FFFFFF255255255
 Yellow#FCE883252232131
 Yellow Green#C5E384197227132
 Yellow Orange#FFAE4225517466

Fun Effects Mini Twistables

In 2004, Crayola released a 24 pack of Fun Effects Mini Twistables crayons. It contains eight eXtreme colors, eight metallic colors, and eight rainbow colors.

True to Life Crayons

All eight Crayola True to Life crayon colors Crayolattl.png
All eight Crayola True to Life crayon colors

In 2007, Crayola released a set of eight True to Life Crayons. Each crayon is extra-long and contained within a plastic casing similar to that of Crayola Twistables crayons. In the table, the background approximates the primary color and the text is in the two supporting colors. The approximate RGB hex values for each are given as well.

Crayon nameCrayon name
PrimaryOther1Other2PrimaryOther1Other2
AmazonForestCaribbeanCurrent
#92F646#FDFE03#CBFB07#5D8DDF#DACED2#30D6A4
FloridaSunriseGrandCanyon
#FFB329#FFD82C#FFCC6B#6D3834#B36058#000000
MauiSunsetMilkyWay
#8E599F#EC872B#FA79B9#070707#8D479D#6E7FE7
SaharaDesertYosemiteCampfire
#F5CBBD#B06E54#D0C6C6#ED4C44#EF8E30#A95E34

Confetti Crayon

Crayola released a set of 24 Confetti Crayons in 2020. They each contain three colors: one main color, which is displayed outwardly, and two other colors, which are speckled in small bubbles throughout the crayon. [32]

See also

Notes

  1. Due to several factors, the values given should only be considered approximations. The apparent color of any crayon depends on the thickness with which the wax is laid down, the color and brightness of the surface being colored, and other considerations, such as the age and quality of individual crayons. In addition, crayons are produced using pigments, which are normally described using subtractive colors, with the primary colors of red, yellow, and blue; but electronic displays produce colors using the additive method, combining the primary colors of red, green, and blue.
  2. Unless otherwise indicated, the hex colors were found in the source code of the Crayola website. If unavailable, an approximate value is used. [1]
  3. Crayola's digital swatch has the same value as those of Laser Lemon.
  4. Crayola's digital swatch has the same values as those of Purple Pizzazz.
  5. Crayola's digital swatch has the same values as those of Hot Magenta (1990–present).

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Crayon</span> Stick made up of pigmented wax, used for writing or drawing

A crayon is a stick of pigmented wax used for writing or drawing. Wax crayons differ from pastels, in which the pigment is mixed with a dry binder such as gum arabic, and from oil pastels, where the binder is a mixture of wax and oil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Crayola</span> American corporation

Crayola LLC, formerly the Binney & Smith Company, is an American manufacturing and retail company specializing in art supplies. It is known for its brand Crayola and best known for its crayons. The company is headquartered in Forks Township, Pennsylvania in the Lehigh Valley region of the state. Since 1984, Crayola has been a wholly owned subsidiary of Hallmark Cards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Silver (color)</span> Metallic color tone resembling gray

Silver or metallic gray is a color tone resembling gray that is a representation of the color of polished silver.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lavender (color)</span> Light shade of purple derived from the lavender plant

Lavender is a light shade of purple or violet. It applies particularly to the color of the flower of the same name. The web color called lavender is displayed adjacent—it matches the color of the palest part of the flower; however, the more saturated color shown as floral lavender more closely matches the average color of the lavender flower as shown in the picture and is the tone of lavender historically and traditionally considered lavender by average people as opposed to website designers. The color lavender might be described as a medium purple or a light pinkish-purple. The term lavender may be used in general to apply to a wide range of pale, light, or grayish-purples, but only on the blue side; lilac is pale purple on the pink side. In paints, the color lavender is made by mixing purple and white paint.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lemon (color)</span> Shade of yellow

Lemon or lemon-color is a vivid yellow color characteristic of the lemon fruit. Shades of "lemon" may vary significantly from the fruit's actual color, including fluorescent tones and creamy hues reflective of lemon pies and confections.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lime (color)</span> Shade of yellow-green

Lime is a color that is a shade of yellow-green, so named because it is a representation of the color of the citrus fruit called limes. It is the color that is in between the web color chartreuse and yellow on the color wheel. Alternate names for this color included yellow-green, lemon-lime, lime green, or bitter lime.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cornflower blue</span> Shade of blue

Cornflower blue is a shade of medium-to-light blue containing relatively little green. This hue was one of the favorites of the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sapphire (color)</span> Blue color that represents the sapphire gem

Sapphire is a saturated shade of blue, referring to the gem of the same name. Sapphire gems are most commonly found in a range of blue shades although they can be many different colors. Other names for variations of the color sapphire are blue sapphire or sapphire blue, shown below.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shades of orange</span> Varieties of the color orange

In optics, orange has a wavelength between approximately 585 and 620 nm and a hue of 30° in HSV color space. In the RGB color space it is a secondary color numerically halfway between gamma-compressed red and yellow, as can be seen in the RGB color wheel. The complementary color of orange is azure. Orange pigments are largely in the ochre or cadmium families, and absorb mostly blue light.

The following is a partial timeline of Crayola's history. It covers the Crayola brand of marking utensils, as well as the history of Binney & Smith, the company that created the brand and is currently a subsidiary of Hallmark Cards known as Crayola LLC.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ruby (color)</span> Color that represents the ruby gemstone

Ruby is a color that is a representation of the color of the cut and polished ruby gemstone and is a shade of red or pink.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shades of red</span> Varieties of the color red

Varieties of the color red may differ in hue, chroma or lightness, or in two or three of these qualities. Variations in value are also called tints and shades, a tint being a red or other hue mixed with white, a shade being mixed with black. A large selection of these various colors are shown below.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pearl (color)</span>

The color pearl is a pale tint of off-white. It is a representation of the average color of a pearl.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shades of white</span> Varieties of the color white

Shades of white are colors that differ only slightly from pure white. Variations of white include what are commonly termed off-white colors, which may be considered part of a neutral color scheme.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Metallic color</span> Of colors: having a sheen, as of metals

A metallic color is a color that appears to be that of a polished metal. The visual sensation usually associated with metals is its metallic shine. This cannot be reproduced by a simple solid color, because the shiny effect is due to the material's brightness varying with the surface angle to the light source. In addition, there is no mechanism for showing metallic or fluorescent colors on a computer without resorting to rendering software which simulates the action of light on a shiny surface. Consequently in art and in heraldry one would normally use a metallic paint that glitters like a real metal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Crayola crayons</span>

Since the introduction of Crayola drawing crayons by Binney & Smith in 1903, more than two hundred colors have been produced in a wide variety of assortments. Crayola became such a hit because the company figured out a way to inexpensively combine paraffin wax with safe pigments. The line has undergone several major revisions in its history, notably in 1935, 1949, 1958, and 1990. Numerous specialty crayons have also been produced, complementing the basic Crayola assortment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shades of rose</span> Varieties of the color rose

Rose is the color halfway between red and magenta on the HSV color wheel, also known as the RGB color wheel.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 "Explore Colors". crayola.com. Retrieved 5 May 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 Welter, Ed (2021-11-12). "The Definitive History of the Colors of Crayola Reference – Alphabetical List of Crayon Colors". CrayonCollecting.com. Archived from the original on 2021-11-22. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  3. Crayola.com,"Crayola Announces the Retirement of Dandelion on National Crayon Day", retrieved 14 September 2017.
  4. Crayola boots dandelion for bluish crayon yet to be named, CBC News, March 31, 2017
  5. Crayola.com, "Meet Bluetiful", retrieved 14 September 2017.
  6. 1 2 3 4 "Special Colors of Kindness Labels". Crayola.com. Crayola LLC. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "NEW! Colors of Kindness" (PDF). Crayola.com. Crayola LLC. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  8. "Crayola Crayon Chronology — Silver Swirls". Crayola LLC. Retrieved 2009-04-08.; re-accessed April 19, 2008
  9. "Crayola Crayon Chronology — Gem Tones". Crayola LLC. Retrieved 2009-04-08.; re-accessed April 19, 2008
  10. "Crayola Crayon Chronology — Pearl Brite". Crayola LLC. Retrieved 2009-04-08.; re-accessed April 19, 2008
  11. "Crayola.com – Crayola Metallic Crayons".
  12. "Crayola Crayon Chronology — Magic Scent 16". Crayola LLC. Retrieved 2009-04-08.; re-accessed April 19, 2008
  13. "TheCrayolaStore.com – Crayola Silly Scents Crayons (52–3417)". Archived from the original on May 5, 2009.
  14. "Unnamed Flickr Image" . Retrieved April 9, 2009.[ permanent dead link ]
  15. "Crayola® Large Multicultural Crayons – 8 Ct". Archived from the original on May 17, 2014. Retrieved 2014-05-15.
  16. "Crayola Doesn't Understand the Meaning of "Multicultural"". Latino Rebels. November 17, 2012.
  17. Lawson, Carol (15 November 1995). "After a Protest by Parents, Crayola Changes Its Recipes". The New York Times.
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