If you’re gonna try this at home, be sure to use the right crayons.
Science Buzz Crayola is far superior. If your parents never bought you at least the 64 count Crayola box with built-in sharpener, they didn't love you.
TV Buzz Fox is bewildered to why Crayola would make multicultural markers! I mean, everybody's skin color is the same, right? Crayola should really stop pandering to those damn liberals!
A Youtuber with the handle of Shoenice has carved out a niche for himself by eating weird things. Here are but a few of his gastronomic challenges, including tampons, lit matches and (most inedible of all) McDonald's.
Culture Buzz Herb Williams uses Crayola crayons to make art. But he doesn't use the Crayolas to color! Instead, he uses them as materials for sculpture. Amazing things can happen with 50,000 crayons!
Culture Buzz Upon first glance, Christian Faur’s crayon art looks more like a rasturbated photograph than a portrait made of colored crayons. After scanning a photo, Faur breaks the picture down into color blocks. Then he closely aligns thousands of colored crayons to recreate the image. Truly amazing! (Via)
Adorable carved crayons! Once you're done looking at them, you can color with 'em.
An incredible amount of time must have gone into carving these crayons to look like the animals of the Chinese Zodiac. I guess my color is “scarlet.” How about you?
John Coker constructed some homemade Crayola rockets and they are awesome! Click through for a how-to.
Like everything else in our culture, Crayons have just become far too complicated.
Christian Faur's art is awesome AND shows how many Crayon colors there are! Remember 'Burnt Sienna'? Or 'Best Friends'? Or 'Awesome'?
Culture Buzz For their 50th anniversary, Crayon renames eight of its crayon colors to names like “best friends” and “awesome.” The new names are pretty boring, but they’ve inspired a bunch of snarky responses. Some of our favorite rejected names: Eating Disorder (burnt sienna), Melanoma (tan), and Foster Home (gray),