whatever type of paper you want wink wink™
The kind that you color with. But really they have pretty much the same as the regular Crayola's have.
You can use crayons on just about any kind of fabric. For some of the synthetics, you would find it easier to use a frame, or hoop to hold it tight. The best fabric is heavier cotton, denim, or canvas. If you are working with a special project, you should purchase the Fabric Crayons, which are specially formulated to write on fabric.
Well,I could say yes,but it also depends on what kind of paper u use,so technically,yes paper can float on water
because she is fat and loves crayons of the red kind
Crayons are not rock. They are colored wax. A rock is made up of minerals, and minerals are defined as a naturally occurring, homogeneous inorganic solid substance having a definite chemical composition and characteristic crystalline structure, color, and hardness, according to the Free Online Dictionary. Crayons lack several of those characteristics. They are man made, out of organic materials, and can be variable in color and hardness, depending on the brand. They also have no crystalline structure whatsoever. Therefore, crayons are not made of rock.
Salt water, its a greenish color. And about 50 degrees
Litmus at a pH of 7 (which is nominally what an NaCl solution should have at room temperature) is a kind of purple color, somewhere between the "red" acidic form and the "blue" basic form. As with many indicators, the color change happens over a range rather than at a specific pH; the range for litmus is from around 5 (red) to 8 or so (blue).
Water but if that does not work then use toothpaste it depends what kind of hair color you have
The core of a coloured pencil or pencil crayons, is made up of a wax-like center. The center is mixed with pigment and other fillers that gives each its own color.
a lot of chocolate and crayons with a liner of goochie shoes.:>
a lot of chocolate and crayons with a liner of goochie shoes.:>
Cobalt chloride paper is absorbent paper which has been soaked in cobalt chloride solution and allowed to dry. It is a convenient way to use cobalt chloride as a test for the presence of water. When cobalt chloride is anhydrous, that is completely without water, it is blue, but when there is water present, either in solution or in the solid, it is pink. To use cobalt chloride paper it is heated to drive off the water present, until it turns blue. You then dip it into the liquid you want to test. Water,or any liquid such as milk which contains water, will turn the paper pink (it may look white if there's not much cobalt chloride on it). Other liquids, e.g. gasoline, will have no effect.