No. 12 Crayola Gold Medal Crayons

I was soooo lucky to get these boxes of No. 12 Crayola Gold Medal School Crayons. I received both of these boxes from John Corb. I am super grateful. Crayola came out with 12 colors in their first lineup in 1903, but in 1910 Crayola converted the 6 and 12 Rubens boxes to Crayola Gold Medal boxes. Until this time only the 8 count crayon box was Gold Medal. I would love to get my hands on one of those. Crayola continued to make 12 count boxes and still does. They are not standard in the school section of the Crayola aisle, but can be found in specialty and educational websites and stores.
Click here to search these on ebay. Warning they are very rare crayons.

The boxes are quite different. The 1910 box is more ornate. The 1940 box is more gold and reminiscent in color to the colors used currently for Crayola boxes. The 1910 box informs the user these colors can be used "for educational color work". At that time Crayola also had the Rubens that were marketed to Artists.

The 1940 box discontinued Eng. Vermilion, Cobalt Blue, and Lt. Green and replaced them with Yellow-Green, Red-Orange and Blue Violet.

Thank you Ed Welter for providing info on these boxes so I can date these boxes.

Color Information 
Boxes: No. 12 Crayola Gold Medal School Crayons, 1910 and 1940
What's inside the box: 
1910 Box: Burnt Sienna, Black, Violet, Brown, Cobalt Blue, Blue, Green, Lt. Green, Yellow, Orange, Red, Eng. Vermilion
1940 Box:  RED, RED-ORANGE, ORANGE, YELLOW, YELLOW-GREEN, GREEN, BLUE, BLUE VIOLET, VIOLET, BLACK, BURNT SIENNA, BROWN
Where to buy: eBay
The wrappers on the 1910 crayons and the 1940 crayons are quite different. The 1910 crayons look hand stamped with different fonts, different spacing and sizes. The crayon name is capitalized, Trade  Mark is in all caps, Crayola is written with quotations markers, Binney & Smith Co. is in all caps and New York, where they were made is written in all caps.

The 1940 crayon has the signature Crayola border. It contains the same information, but the information is contained in an oval. See this post to see the whole wrapper of the 1940 crayons.
Collecting Information
These are very rare boxes and highly collectible. There are only a few known original Crayola No. 12 Gold Medal boxes out there.
Boxes: No. 12 Crayola Gold Medal School Crayons, 1910 and 1940
Other Boxes: Other years, 1919, 1928, 1932, 1935, 1938, 1946, 1950, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1966, 1970, 1979, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2012
Year: 1910, 1940
Style Numbers: none
Code Numbers: none
UPC Numbers: none
Manufacturing Location: USA
Where to buy: eBay

The back of the box explains what a crayon is because it was new at the time. It was "an artist's crayon at scholars' price." It was "permanent" and "waterproof". It "will not rub off." It "will not soil the hands or clothes." The crayons come are "made in black, white and twenty-four different colors". The sides say they are "good in any climate". Though that might be a misnomer, because I have had crayons melt in the car. The crayons are "clean, compact and convenient".  The other side of the box says there are "twelve assorted colors including brown and black".




By 1940 the crayon box did not need as much explanations. The dropped the color descriptions, permanent and waterproof and the clean, compact and convenient. 
I am so excited to have these boxes. They are such a treasure.

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No. 16 Gold Medal Sixteen Colors Nostalgic Box

The Crayola No. 16 Gold Medal School crayons box was released in 2002 and contains the standard crayola colors. The back of the box says, "Crayola proudly presents this limited edition nostalgic box of 16 crayons." Basically the box was nostalgic, not the crayons themselves. This box design is based on the 1940 crayon box design.
 
Color Information 
Boxes: No.16 gold Medal School Crayons
What's inside the box: 
carnation pink, red violet, red, red orange, orange, yellow orange, yellow, yellow green, green, blue green, blue, blue violet, violet (purple), brown, white, black
Where to buy: eBay

Collecting Information
Boxes: No.16 gold Medal School Crayons
Other Boxes: This is a nostalgic box.
Year: 2002
Style Numbers: 52-3016
Code Numbers: 52-3016-0-211
UPC Numbers: 071662000165
Manufacturing Location: USA
Where to buy: ebay
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Crayola 36 Count Yellow Vintage Crayon Box: What's Inside the Box

Crayola made the Gold Medal Crayon 36 count box somewhere in the 1940's. It was filled with 36 sticks of the same color. On the front of the box they specified that it was "for every day use" and also "School crayons". I think this was to advertise to both market segments, parents and educators. Crayola still specified they were a company at this time on the front of the box. The front of the box was actually a side. The box was made with a lid instead of the common tuck box. This would make it easier for kids to grab one at school. This box was a precursor to the No. 836 box.

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Crayola Gold Medal Tin

The No 8 Crayola Gold Medal School Crayons came out in 2000. It fits a box of 8 count crayons. I keep a box of crayons named by Crayola fans on Facebook in the box. The cover of the box is the same as the tin. This design is reminiscent of the original No 8 count box of crayons after Binney & Smith debuted the Crayola trademarked box and won the 1904 St. Louis World Fair in the An-Du-Septic dustless chalk catergory. The box is orange and has a coin in the middle that says, "UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION SAINT LOUIS UNITED STATES OF AMERICA." World Fairs started in 1851 and still go on today. I had not idea they still had them. They are now called EXPO's and are not held at regular intervals. At this time large structures would be built showcasing the technology of the Era. Before this time crayons were not really a big thing. They specified on the box that what crayons could be used for. It says, "SCHOOL CRAYONS FOR EDUCATIONAL COLOR WORK MANUFACTURED BY BINNEY & SMITH CO." This tin is such a fun way to celebrate the early history of Crayola.

source: http://www.crayoncollecting.com/ccolor01.htm

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64 Count Vintage Pop Art Crayola Crayons: What's Inside the Box

I love that Crayola likes to do throwbacks every once in a while. They definitely did this with the No 64 Vintage Pop Art Crayola Crayons Gold Medal School Crayons. The box design colors are fun, especially the blue, purple, green and yellow one.  The orange one is a throwback to classic Crayola boxes.  It is my favorite over the yellow orange box because of all the fun colors. I have been wanting this since I first saw it online, but I did not want to pay shipping.  I found it at the Crayola Store in Kansas City, Missouri.  You can see it is a little beat up, which is a disappointment, but it was the last one.  There are no new colors in the box, even though the back of the box is misleading and sounds like there might be new colors.

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Crayola 24 Count Gold Medal School Crayons: What's Inside the Box

The No 242 Crayola Gold Medal School Crayons were first made in 1950.  There are not a lot of boxes with the Gold Medal on the front of the box.  I got these from a friend.  It is interesting to note that Crayola was thinking about writing on fabric way back in the 1950's when this box was made.  On the back of the box it describes how to affix the crayon onto fabric in a process similar to one found in their patents for fabric crayons.  

This year also marks the year that Binney & Smith went from a Company to a corporation.  The front of the box says Inc instead of Co.  My oldest box of crayons which I have not posted yet are from the 40's.  It shows company on the crayon wrappers. 

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