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| | | Product Details: | | | Product Length:
| 0.69 inches | | Product Width:
| 3.5 inches | | Product Height:
| 8.25 inches | | Product Weight:
| 0.1 pounds | | Package Length:
| 8.6 inches | | Package Width:
| 3.6 inches | | Package Height:
| 0.7 inches | | Package Weight:
| 0.25 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 12 reviews |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 12 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Original post portrayed 50-count box and was misleading -- that has now been fixedAug 11, 2011
By Allen Smalling
"Constant Reader,"
**Since the representational photo for this product seems to have been changed from the 50-count box (wrong) to the 24-count box (correct), my original complaint about the miscue is no longer salient. What follows is an amended review of Crayola's two-dozen box of colored pencils posted September 1, 2011 - al smalling, chicago**
The kid-oriented box of 12 or 24 colored seven-inch pencils has practically become a staple product. Crayola color pencils, while bold, run to vivid colors rather than deep colors, and exude a child-friendly optimism. The "lead" inside them is strong by the standards of color pencils. In the absence of bells and whistles like an eraser tip or a built-in sharpener, you can safely buy by price unless your child's school says otherwise. Use a handheld sharpener.
For literally just few dollars more, though, there are many brands in the under-nine dollar range to which the child who is more tween than primary-grade can be introduced: Sanford's "Col-Erase" in boxes of either 12 or 24 comes to mind because they sharpen well and have ferrule-tipped erasers attached, just like any standard black #2. Also (Dixon) Ticonderoga's "Erasable Checking Pencils" (make sure you buy the multicolored dozen). Still very much in the "colored pencil" genre, but a step up in sophistication and product count are Sargent's "50 Colored Pencils." For older or highly motivated kids and adults, at above twenty dollars, particularly the budding artist who shows a desire for blending hues and shading color laydown, there's a brand (Prismacolor's "Scholar" line) specifically designed to fill the gap between the kind of product under review here and the pricier, pro-level "art stick" that can be bought individually or in sets here, or at places like Dick Blick and Michael's. Buyers today have tons of options.
NOTE: As of this emendation (September 6, 2011), Amazon (and not a third-party vendor) offers this 2-dozen pack of Crayola Colored Pencils at a very good price: <$3-.
11 of 13 found the following review helpful:
Cheap Price, Cheap Performance - You get what you pay forFeb 14, 2010
By Daniel I picked the Crayolas over the Berol Prismacolor (to save some money) to color an Anatomy coloring book for school. Big mistake. The Crayolas are made of a harder substance and thus the colors do not easily glide onto the paper as is the case with Berols. This is important when you need to be precise in coloring small detail. Thus it took a lot longer to color a page, not mention the higher difficulty level and frustrations that accompany the coloring experience.
Now if the coloring objective is for small children's coloring books, then these Crayolas are fine for these needs. But if you're an adult or need to color something more sophisticated, go with the Berols!
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Needed for school.Aug 29, 2009
By Delamaine
"Formerly Belacane"
For some reason although these are on all the school supply lists, nobody around here actually sells the 24-pack. But they are good items. I'd rather have my kids use good colored pencils like Prismacolor or Polychromos, but these are pretty cheap and since they're for school I don't mind buying them.
2 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Difficult to sharpenAug 04, 2011
By AntaeusQ
"antaeusq"
These are hard to sharpen mechanically. The machine just kept on eating them. The color-material is too brittle. Had to use a knife.
Coloring PencilsFeb 01, 2012
By Pineda26 I have a habit of buying lots of coloring pencils since I color my drawings and like them to look dark and bold these colors were exactly what I expect from colored pencils. If you get these colored pencils you should get the maped metal sharpeners!
See all 12 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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