Sentences with word «crayola»

Midnight blue was also one of my favorites in my box of crayolas and would always be worn down to a nub.
I gave the two year old some washable crayola markers though because frankly, I wanted to focus on my own eggs rather than making sure he didn't color all over himself with permanent markers.
We use crayola for coloring, copic markers are too expensive to have him drawing on everything.
Kid patrons are routinely given seasonal decor to color with their finest Crayolas and hang on the walls.
For the most part I get to just breeze past the local store displays of crayola crayons and lunchboxes... although I have found some green options there too.
The sets and camerawork resemble colorful illustrations from children's books and crayola drawings from a kindergarten art class.
You'll want to start stocking up on red Crayolas now.
Regular old crayola chalk works the best.
Give your bunny a pinky blush with a pink marker (I used crayola, but any pink marker will do).
The color is over the top, super saturated, and vibrant, like being punched in the gut with a box of Crayolas!
Crayolas and the televised tournaments — although I eventually learned to tell Forest Green and Carnation Pink (they're crayons) from Kerbrell Brown and LucQuente White (they're players).
more than the crayola's one Great Idea!
the crayola washable markers REALLY are washable.
(We spent lots of time together sprawled out on the living room floor with our Crayolas.)
The flesh of the «Val Blue» is a rich, royal violet color, which cooks up to a purple shade straight out of a box of Crayolas.
The animation is smooth and the colours and explosions over the top in a crayola way that works well.
Even the look of Zelda games with their crayola / fisher price colour palletts and character design looks like it's aimed at kids.
But Mother Nature is no slouch, and in fact, the more brightly colored some of these little guys are, the more poisonous they are to potential predators — their crayola - colors are actually loud warnings saying, «watch it, buster, you'll be sorry.»
Empirical Zeal — The crayola - fication of the world: How we gave colors names, and it messed with our brains (part I)-- Aatish Bhatia — The Japanese had no word for green until the 20th century, we learn; until then it was all blue to them.
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