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Crayola Pencil Crayons Review And Demonstration

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By waynet


Crayola Colored Pencil Crayons

Crayola coloured pencils.
Crayola coloured pencils.

Crayola Coloured Pencils

Crayola pencil crayones have been the most recognizable pencil brand since I was a kid and often at christmas time without fail I'd recieve a pack of crayola pencils that I'd almost obliterate them by being busy colouring stuff.

As I got older and more experienced with adding colour to drawings I soon found out how to blend colours great with crayola pencils and not scribble with the pencils, instead I found that it looks much better when you try and colour in neat and tidy like.

As with any good quality art brand you soon branch out into other products like felt tip pens and art markers to diversify your art, but even to this day I have stuck with cryola pencil crayons for their ability to adapt to most paper surfaces and the blendable factor that I have come to admire and be an expert in.

Crayola coloured pencils come in packs of varying numbers and I often buy the larger packs as they have more colour range with inbetween colours of the primary colours Red, Yellow and Blue.

As a little demonstration of crayolas blendable pencil qualities, here is a few black line drawings that I coloured with some Crayola pencils, so you can see the quality results that these pencils can achieve, of course the full range of colouring effects you can achieve are beyond this hubpage, so look for a further hubpage exporing some creative colour effects of the Crayola Color pencils.

Also I have a quick video demonstration of blending some fire colours for flame with Crayola Coloured pencils, which just gives a small tip or two below, so check it out.

Crayola Colored Pencil Examples

Crayola coloured pencil drawing examples, which gives you a quick example of what you can do with the crayola pencil range.
Crayola coloured pencil drawing examples, which gives you a quick example of what you can do with the crayola pencil range.

Blending Fire Colours With Crayola Coloured Pencils Videos

Crayola Pencil Crayons To Buy On Amazon

Crayola 30ct Twistables Colored Pencils Crayola 30ct Twistables Colored Pencils
Price: $6.96
List Price: $12.99
Crayola 64ct Short Colored Pencils Kids Choice Colors Crayola 64ct Short Colored Pencils Kids Choice Colors
Price: $7.83
List Price: $9.99
Crayola 12ct Long Colored Pencils Crayola 12ct Long Colored Pencils
Price: $0.01
List Price: $3.79

Crayola Coloured Pencils

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Pamela Laird profile image

Pamela Laird  says:
5 months ago

I must say that crayola does not hold a candle to the rembrandt line or the prisma verithins but for a young and beginning artist I believe they would be the least costly and also work very well. Thanks for the demo and the idea for a post.

waynet profile image

waynet  says:
5 months ago

That is true, but I always have to use the cheaper pencils as they are more accessible, although I do have a couple of Prisma verithin packs for best and some good Derwent pencils too, although I haven't tried the Rembrandt line, so I may have to check them out.

I've been using Crayola pencils for years and just seem more set in my ways of using them.

Thanks for your comments Pamela!

robertsloan2 profile image

robertsloan2  says:
5 months ago

Good review of Crayola colored pencils/pencil crayons. They are the highest quality scholastic colored pencils I have ever tried. For artist grade, Berol Prismacolor Verithin are quite reasonably priced and have a similar hardness.

Crayola are very good for tonal shading, as you demonstrated in your video. It's possible to get excellent precision with them and full heavy coverage, it just takes more layers and more pressure on the burnishing layers than when using artist grade colored pencils.

The most economical artist grade colored pencil is Koh-I-Noor Progresso Woodless. In the USA you can get a set of 24 online at Blick for $10.99 -- and each one has five times the pigment of a normal artist grade colour pencil because they are woodless. They are sturdy, lacquered and hard to break. They do sharpen to a fine point and have medium softness comparable to Faber-Castell Polychromos or Blick Artists' colored pencils.

So these are very good for filling in large areas and as themselves for any use. The color range in the 24 color set is good for just about anything with mixing.

Up in Canada, the Laurentien colour pencils are excellent. I have a set of 60 of those and also a set of 12 double-ended ones that I like a lot. Neither Laurentien nor Crayola state anything about lightfastness though.

This may not matter a bit to someone doing a graphic novel. If your originals are intended to be scanned or photographed and printed, archival quality is a matter of quality prints with archival inks and paper. Store originals in black archival storage boxes and use good paper so that it doesn't yellow.

That way if your book is so popular that they want to reprint it in ten or twenty years, you can get the originals re-scanned with the technology of the day and they'll still be good. Either that or just be sure to back up your digital originals because the cheaper way to produce so many beautiful artworks is to use normal illustration board or Bristol, much cheaper than museum board, and Crayolas or Laurentien instead of artist grade colored pencils.

It depends on your purpose for the art whether lightfastness is an issue or not. If you sell originals, it's important to be honest with the buyer about the materials you used and whether or not they may be fugitive. They may still want to buy it but will be able to better care for it if they know to protect it from light rather than display it framed on the wall.

SweetiePie profile image

SweetiePie  says:
5 months ago

I am enjoying your coloring technique and YouTube videos Waynet. Good job!

waynet profile image

waynet  says:
5 months ago

Wow! what a comment!! Cheers Robert!

I do plan to go through some crayola colouring techniques with laying colours over another and cross hatching lines of different colours together etc on another hubpage, as this would enforce this hubpage a bit better.

I recently found a load of packaged illustration board just laying around in a dumpster, so I took it and because of the great quality of it I have started to do a graphic novel with this.

Crayola pencils are just great for me, but I do have other pencils which are more high end than crayola, but I always come back to Crayola...

waynet profile image

waynet  says:
5 months ago

Thanks Sweetie!

I'm finding I'm doing more and more videos now with my flip camera than ever and it's great to do some drawing ones as it is far clearer than when I used to just use my webcam.

I'm going to update that video, with the full coloured version of all the flame and fire around the skull...nearly finished it actually.

Marie Dwivkidz profile image

Marie Dwivkidz  says:
5 months ago

I always treat my kids to a pack of Crayola in the Christmas stocking. They are a great compromise - accessible price and rewarding quality and results - far better than many packs of kiddy art materials which look great and then disappoint. Oh, and then I get to use them too! Good hub wayet!

waynet profile image

waynet  says:
5 months ago

Thanks Marie!

I always buy 5 or 6 packs a month as they are used frequently for colouring.

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