Buy experiments and Crayons were creted by franchicise molonieces
CRAYOLA
Crayola makes 2,400 crayons in a batch, and each of its machines can make up to 230,000, all of the same color, in an eight-hour shift (info from wiki answers) thanks
about 50,000 crayons are made in a day. the workers must work hard.
Crayons weren't discovered, but they were first introduced back in 1903. Many people think Crayola invented them.
There is 7 cm in a "dandelion Crayola crayon." As are most crayons.
8, Crayola brand crayons (compare prices) were the first kids crayons ever made, invented by cousins, Edwin Binney and C. Harold Smith. The brand's first box of eight Crayola crayons made its debut in 1903. The crayons were sold for a nickel and the colors were black, brown, blue, red, purple, orange, yellow, and green. The word Crayola was created by Alice Stead Binney (wife of Edwin Binney) who took the French words for chalk (craie) and oily (oleaginous) and combined them.
Technically, it depends on how big your crayons are.Let's asume the average. According Wikipedia, a standard sized Crayola crayon is 3⅝" × 5/16" this is 9.2 cm x 0.8 cm, then 133 crayons will fit.
Going by the official list of 133 colors, there are sixteen crayons with the descriptor "blue" in them, plus an additional five that are still somewhat blue in nature but do not have the word "blue" in the name.
They are most often called the "tip". Crayola has a mascot called "Tip" that they feature on many of their products and advertising materials.
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=Crayola products are much more well made than RoseArt products, for the fact that Crayola crayons are harder to break, easier to use, and don't have as waxy of an apperance on the paper when drawn with. So to answer your question, Yes, Crayola products are better than RoseArt products.=
More than 100 billion crayons have been produced so far. The first crayons consisted of a mixture of charcoal and oil. In the early 1900s, cousins Edwin Binney and Harold Smith developed a nontoxic wax crayon. Binney's wife, Alice, attached the French word for chalk, craie, with "ola," from oily, to form the Crayola brand name. Their first box of Crayola crayons were sold for a nickel in 1903. The first Crayola crayons came in a box of eight colors: black, blue, brown, green, orange, purple, red and yellow. By 1957, 40 new colors were introduced. Today there are more than 120 crayon colours, including Atomic Tangerine, Blizzard Blue, Mango Tango, Outrageous Orange, Laser Lemon, Screamin' Green and Shocking Pink. Over 5 billion crayons are produced each year.