I was on the Crayola site with my 7 year old and clicked on the history of Crayola colours. Fascinating to see how something an innocuous as a crayon has been affected by PC even as far back as half a century ago.

http://www.crayola.com/colorcensus/history/chronology.cfm

Even more interesting that the colour Indian red was pulled because it was perceived to be about native Americans when in fact it was based on a pigment found in India. what does that say? Something but I'm too tired to be insightful.

And just to prove that everything comes round to Buffy in my mind, here's a near drabble I wrote a year ago, after the S6 finale, with a crayon theme.



Rainbow Tears

A sky of periwinkle arched to meet a turquoise sea. Clouds like fluffy blobs of cream begged for a long spoon to scoop them up. Far below, the waves lapped gently against a beach of tumbleweed brown, framed by sepia rocks, sharp and rugged.

Floating on the sea was a boat, its sails bright with stripes of carnation pink and olive green.

Idyllic, except for one jarring note. Hanging in the sky, casting a baleful glare on the scene below was a violet-red sun....

A puzzled frown on her face, the kindergarten teacher flipped the drawing over and read the name on the back.

wIllOw R.

The End



Note; all crayon colours in the story (periwinkle, sepia etc) are real Crayola shades
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting
.

Profile

janedavitt: (Default)
janedavitt

Most Popular Tags

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags