作者nfsong (圖書館我來了)
看板PCSH91_305
標題Crayola's Law: "The number of colors doubles every 28 years
時間Sun Feb 7 14:11:34 2010
http://www.weathersealed.com/tags/crayons/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Crayola_crayon_colors
First, Pluto got a demotion. Then, surfing the FM dial, I heard a Styx song
on the oldies station. And just yesterday, park-side, a nanny chided me: “
Star fish? No, kids call those sea stars nowadays.” Oh, really?
Denial worked for a while, but honesty’s time had come. “Okay,” I said to
myself, “admit it. Once, you were a cool dude, but he got eaten by your
inner dinosaur. Now, go roar, or something.”
Lumbering homeward with my sons, doubt swirled about my tiny Stegosaurus
brain. I quite liked my Jurassic bubble of backwardness, but was I raising
my brood in it, too?
As we strolled down the sidewalk, we happened upon a stray green crayon. My
kids still doodled with the familiar hues of my youth, but did other
children? Or had they ditched that stupid stuff for a new-and-improved,
perceptually-optimized, ISO-12647-2-compliant wax-based coloring system?
Crayons!
Crayons!
Us Stegosauri can’t type, unless we have something pointy attached to our
feet. That evening, thankfully, my boys duct-taped a couple of pencils to my
toes, and thus equipped, I hunted-and-pecked across the Internet Dot Com and
eventually landed on the web site of Crayola, the undisputed King Of Crayons.
Crayola’s crayon chronology tracks their standard box, from its humble eight
color beginnings in 1903 to the present day’s 120-count lineup. According
to Crayola, of the precious crayons of my childhood – the seventy-two colors
from the official 1975 set – sixty-one survive. Today, each is loved to
nubs by kids worldwide, just like when I was a sprout. Woohoo! Maybe I’m
slightly less ancient than a dinosaur – a woolly mammoth, perhaps?
The next day, I gave my buddy Velociraptor a ding-a-ling, and true to form,
he yakked his hyperactive yakkage – until I mentioned the crayons. Five
quick claw taps rang out from the phone, then silence, a hiss of “check your
email,” and click! The line went dead. Good ol’ Velo’s sharp as a tack,
but he’s also that way, if you know what I mean.
Three minutes passed, and “bing!” Oh, a message from
[email protected],
let’s see… with an image attached, labeled Crayola Color Chart, 1903-2010:
To create the chart, Velo gently scraped Wikipedia’s list of Crayola colors,
corrected a few hues, and added the standard 16-count School Crayon box
available in 1935.
Except for the dayglow-ski-jacket-inspired burst of neon magentas at the end
of the ’80s, the official color set has remained remarkably faithful to its
roots!
Ever industrious, Velo also calculated the average growth rate: 2.56%
annually. For maximum understandability, he reformulated it as “Crayola’s
Law,” which states:
The number of colors doubles every 28 years!
If the Law holds true, Crayola’s gonna need a bigger box, because by the
year 2050, there’ll be 330 different crayons! Shortly thereafter, frazzled
packaging designers rejoice, for to the rescue comes a revolution in
household appliances: the new-fangled Replicator-Dissociator! Load it with
the Crayola plugin, and you’re seconds away from every shade in the rainbow
– no boxes required!
At the dinner table in 2100 AD, great-great-grandson John might ask: “Hal,
could you use this leftover broccoli to make five crayons, spaced evenly
between Pantone 205 and hex f8b3a2, inclusive, please?”
To which Hal will reply: “Most certainly, John, I can do that. Would you
like a dinosaur coloring book, too?”
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