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Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Cotton Candy

Cotton Candy Rose Garden

Cotton Candy Rose Garden

Cotton Candy Rose Pavillion

Cotton Candy Rose Pavillion

Pink Everywhere!

Pink Everywhere!

All of these photos (for my interpretation of Cotton Candy) were taken in the Rose Garden of Lady Winston Churchill at Chartwell, in the UK. For more information and pictures about Chartwell look HERE.

In 1864 Joseph Binney founded the Peekskill Chemical Company in Upstate New York for producing carbon black.

By 1885, son Edward Binney and cousin, C. Harold Smith form a company called Binney & Smith to produce a red oxide pigment used for barn paint and carbon black for car tires.

In 1889 the yellow oxide pigment was added. There were now three colors produced, Carbon black, yellow and red.

In 1900 the company started producing slate school pencils in the new mill in Easton, Pennsylvania. Their Carbon Black wins the Gold Medal at the Paris Exposition. Lets eat Cotton Candy to celebrate!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Chestnut

Virginia Woolf's Mantel at Monk's House

Virginia Woolf’s Mantel at Monk’s House, UK

 

Doorbells on Wood Beam, Monk's House, UK

Doorbells on Wood Beam, Monk’s House, UK

In 1999, Crayola renamed its reddish-brown crayon to avoid misunderstandings over the color’s origin.  After going through more than 250,000 suggested names, the color Indian Red, which Crayola said was based on the reddish-brown pigment commonly found near India, was dropped from the collection because teachers complained students thought it described the skin color of American Indians. The new name would be Chestnut.

I took these pictures at Virginia Woolf’s home, Monk’s House, in Rodmell. The wood may not be Chestnut, but the color looks right to me! Also, in the photo is the front and back door doorbells! A time gone by!

In the “State Crayon Collection,” Chestnut is known as Maple Syrup, the color for the state of Vermont in the Crayola Series.

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Cerulean

The Lake at Hever Castle, Kent, UK

The Lake at Hever Castle, Kent, UK

 

Scarlet Pimpernel Crayola Crayons

Scarlet Pimpernel Crayola Crayons

Cerulean has been in the Crayola lineup since 1990. It is known in Mexico as Aqua Blue and also as Magaruite Celulean in the special Crayola collection called Scarlet Pimpernel.

“They seek him here,
they seek him there,
those Frenchies seek him everywhere.
Is he in heaven or is he in hell?
That damned elusive Pimpernel.”

The Scarlet Pimpernel is an adventure and historical book written by Baroness Emma Orczy in 1905. The book is set in Paris during the French Revolution. Read all about the Pimpernel HERE!

The Scarlet Pimpernel play, was given at the Roseland Ballroom in New York on January 27, 1998, as a benefit. For the opening of the benefit play, Crayola created four new colors and put them into a generic four color box to hand out at the performance. Wouldn’t you like to have those crayons? WOW!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

 

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Caribbean Green and Carnation Pink

 

Charleston House, Home of Vanessa Bell

Charleston House, Home of Vanessa Bell

I found two colors today in one picture from the garden of Vanessa Bell’s home, Charleston House, seven miles east of Lewes, UK. What a beautiful and bountiful garden. For more pictures, look HERE!

Caribbean Green has been in Crayola Collection since 1997. Carnation Pink is the name given to Rose Pink since 1958. It was known as Flamingo Pink in the second “So Big” set of crayons, 1988-1992. It was Pink in the Mexico collection since 1990, Cherry Blossom in the “Colors of Washington, DC series, 2002-2006 and Paler Pink in the special “Color of Binney & Smith” set, 2003.

So Carnation Pink has been on the radar with Crayola a long time and seen many makeovers!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Brick Red

English Red Brick

English Red Brick

 

The Rooster in the Red Brick

The Rooster in the Red Brick

 

Brick Red or Red Brick?

Brick Red or Red Brick?

 

New English Brick

New English Brick

 

Brick Red Crayola

Brick Red Crayola

The Crayola color is Brick Red. Compared to the red bricks of the UK it’s a tad too red! I say always go to the source! I learned at Hampton Court Palace how to tell who laid the bricks. The Flemish bricklayers laid bricks of various shades and lengths all mixed together. The English bricklayers laid one row of short bricks then one row of long bricks. It’s good to know your bricks and bricklayers!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Blush

My Idea of Blush

My Idea of Blush

 

Crayola Blush

Crayola Blush

When I think of Blush, I am thinking of a light pink cheek. Crayola is thinking of a very, very, very, pink cheek! It must be the sun-kissed version of the standard Blush. Crayola’s version of Blush is more like a raspberry. Did you know that Crayola had eight multicultural crayons? Developed in 1992, the colors Apricot, Black, Burnt Sienna, Mahogany, Peach, Sepia, Tan, and White were colors that, “come in an assortment of skin hues that give a child a realistic palette for coloring their world.” No blush there!  Have you seen the Burnt Sienna color? It’s  a shade of orange! I have never seen an orange person, but what do I know? Wait, maybe I have. They are the people who spend too much time in a tanning booth!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola: Blue Violet

The Blue Violet Flowers

The Blue Violet Flowers

 

A Beautiful Garden in West Hoathly, UK

A Beautiful Garden in West Hoathly, UK

I do not know what these flowers are. I think they are primroses. They were a beautiful iridescent Blue Violet! It was just one of thousands of beautiful plants that I saw in the English gardens on my English Garden Tour 2015! 

Just to let you know, I’ve been thinking of what I would do with the lottery money that now is up to over 1 billion. One of the things I would do is purchase a garden and lovely little cottage in the UK and hang out with gardening friends that know all the latin names of flowers. Perhaps they would have a class on such at the local Woman’s Institute meeting, for transplants like me, who would like to be in the know. I can only dream! Well, maybe I could start on one flower. If the flower shown is a primrose, it is called primula vulgaris. How could anything so beautiful be vulgar?

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Blue Green

 

Snazzy Car in the Cotswolds, UK

Snazzy Car in the Cotswolds, UK

It’s the snazziest iridescent Blue Green car in the Cotswolds! What more do I need to say? Ok, the word snazzy was first used in 1932.

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Beaver

The Cottage in St James Park, London

The Cottage in St James Park, London

 

A Photo of the Photo of Windsor Castle

A Photo of the Photo of Windsor Castle

 

Crayola Beaver

Crayola Beaver

Beaver was introduced into the Crayola color line in 1998.

It is the color of the fur of a beaver. The first recorded use of beaver as a color name in English was in 1705.

To me, Beaver, represents multiple shades of brown! I waited FOREVER patiently to get a shot of that stork on the cottage!  I also loved the many brown shades in the photo of the photo of Windsor Castle!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Keeping Up With the Joneses

Blah Blah Blah

Blah Blah Blah

To keep my promise this year of “keeping up” I’ve been looking at my statistics again. Statistics are a wonderful tool, you gain a lot of information, and see what works for you and your blog. The key, and the kicker, is to follow up with the information.

I like the stat that showed the piece I wrote ( An Adventure in the Gardens of Kent ) that had the most comments. There weren’t hundreds of comments, but more than usual. It was also part of a series of posts that I wrote about the UK.  I loved writing the “What I Learned Series,” because I did learn a lot and I wanted to pass it along. Now this got me to thinking about how I have traveled as a Tourist…….then as a Traveler…… and now as a Traveler, who likes to keep up with the Joneses. I no longer am all that interested in seeing famous sites, maybe because I have seen the ones I really wanted to. I don’t like crowds or waiting in lines any more either. Over the years I became a traveler, staying longer in one place and soaking up the scenery, the people, their history. Last year, during my stay in the UK, I found myself investing in “Keeping up with the Joneses.” I found the time to really talk to the people I met. Of course, it helps when you are in a country where the majority of the people speak the same language you do. OK, so I like to talk.  In other countries, I have talked to people that I could only remotely converse with, but still we talked. I call this “Keeping up with the Joneses.” I like learning about their country and I always ask, for those who have been to the US, what they liked about it. I met a wonderful woman on the train in the UK, who was going to a garden luncheon with the Queen, because she was being honored for her local charity work. I felt like I had met royalty!  She had only recently returned from the Southwest, United States where she had met up with a school friend that had moved there.  You know what she liked the most about the US? Drive-thru windows!  Drive-thru fast food, drive-thru bank windows, drive-thru liquor stores, etc….. The availability of  drive thru!  She couldn’t believe how we drive everywhere and then don’t get out of the car! I have never given it one thought! Another woman, who had never been to the US responded, when I asked where she would go first, replied, “to see Elvis Presley’s home!” She loved Elvis Presley!

So, see what I mean about “Keeping up with the Joneses”? I like talking to the people, who are just like me, just regular folks. I am going back to the UK again this year, on a long run; to drive down the country lanes, hang out in the pubs, look at the beautiful gardens, meet and talk with the folks in the small parish church………talk with the Joneses. I can’t wait. I would love to talk to a woman, who is a long time member of the W.I. (Woman’s Institute) The folks probably think I’m odd for loving such things! Such mundane routines for them and absolutely fabulous to me!

So, here is a list of Joneses who have kept in touch with me, through my blog. Although I have never met any of them, they have been the bloggers who continued to chat with me on a regular basis. They wanted to know about me and I wanted to know more about them. It’s a two way street. Have you talked with the Joneses lately?  

My best blogging buddies, who comment, and their blogs;

Diana at Italy Translated. Diana is an American, who is married to an Italian. They live in Italy. I learn a lot about Italian life from her.  I love hearing about her family, and reading her recipes!

Joy at JoyLovesTravel. Joy and I share many interests! It’s uncanny how we think so much alike! We have traveled to many of the same countries and had similar experiences.

Christine at Cristine R. Christine was one of my first Australian friends. She is writing a book and has introduced me to many online courses, which I love. She shows pictures of flowers I have never seen before and lots of bee and insect photos!

Sylvia at Another Day2paradise. Sylvia and I have many travel experiences in common! I love her sense of humor!

Doug at Doug Warren. Doug Warren introduced me to Spotify. I learn more about music from him than from any other person I know! We also realized we are related way, way, way down the line!

How are your Joneses? Enjoy your week in blogging!

PS I come from a long line of Joneses (in my family tree) in real life too!

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