Technically, Crayola produced a whole line of boxes in their origins. They had the familiar box with 8 colors but they also had a box that had 28 colors. Here are the original colors from all of their catalog offerings in 1903/1904:
Black, Blue, Brown (which was also called Van Dyke Brown), Burnt Sienna, Burnt Umber, Celestial Blue, Charcoal Gray, Cobalt Blue (also call Light Blue), Copper, English Vermillion (essentially a shade of red), Flesh Tint (later shortened to Flesh), Gold, Golden Ochre (also called Gold Ochre), Green (also called Chrome Green), Dark Green (Also known as Chrome Dark Green), Light Green (also known as Chrome Light Green), Medium Green (also known as Chrome Medium Green), Indian Red, Lemon Yellow (also known as Light Yellow and Chrome Yellow, Light), Madder Lake, Olive Green, Orange, Permanent Geranium Lake, Permanent Magenta (also known as just Magenta), Pink (also known as Rose Pink), Prussian Blue (also known as Dark Blue), Purple (also known as Violet), Raw Sienna, Raw Umber, Red, Silver, Ultramarine Blue, Venetian Red, "Venetian Red, Dark", "Venetian Red, Light", White, Yellow, "Yellow, Medium" (also known as Chrome Yellow, Medium).
There you have it. The 38 original color offerings across their entire initial catalog.
1902 Crayola crayons introduced by Binney & Smith of Easton, Pennsylvania; Edwin Binney developed the crayon by adding oil and pigments to black parafin and stearic acid marking tools 1903 First box of Crayola crayons produced with eight colors; black, brown, blue, red, purple, orange, yellow, and green. Stankiewicz, Mary Ann. Roots of Art Education. Worcester, Massachusetts: Davis Publications, 2001. Print.
Crayola crayons have been around for over one hundred years and first came to market in the year 1903. They were superior because of their bright colors, their cost and their coverage on paper.
1903 Crayola's first crayon was released.I'm pretty sure that's right :3
Crayola brand crayons 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.
Binney and Smith invented the Crayola crayon. Alice Binney, wife of Edwin and a schoolteacher herself, came up with the name "Crayola".
Binney & Smith, the company that created and sold Crayola crayons actually started from one of the founder's uncle who started a small chemical company in 1864 in Peekskill, PA. Edwin Binney and C. Harold Smith would eventually take over that business and move their factory to Easton, PA and set up a headquarters in New York City. They didn't invent the Crayola brand of crayons until 1903, a year after they invented a black marking crayon for industry under the Staonal brand name. In June 1903 they began selling the Crayola brand through a number of different boxes and color sizes ranging from 6 colors to 30 colors. Their original palate of colors were 38.
Edwin Binney and Harold Smith were the men responsible of the creation of the first crayolas under their Binney & Smith company which was founded back in 1885. In 1903, he produced the first Crayola crayons and trademarked the Crayola name with the help from Binney's wife. They first sold Crayola's in June of 1903 and had a full line of boxes from a 6-color to a 30-color although their 8-color was one of their more famous assortment sizes.
No. Crayola did a 200 color assortment at one time but these days they only have about 120 colors actively used for their crayons. There are school sets that have over 800 crayons in them but they only offer up 16 colors. They are bulk assortments. In the history of Crayola, they haven't even developed enough true colors to create a 480 color box. There are only around 330 true colors that they have created since 1903.
It's really not possible to get a definitive answer on this because the history behind the earliest crayons isn't documented very well. The most likely answer is black because industry marking crayons were around before school or artistic crayons.
In 1903 and sold for a nickel. There were 8 to a box with the colors red, yellow, green, blue, violet, brown and black.
1885 1903
Edwin Binney and C. Harold Smith introduced their Crayola Crayons in a box of 8 in 1903. The first colors were black, brown, blue, red, purple, orange, yellow, and green. 5 cents.
The crayon was invented in 1903