Billie Webb's Blog: My House With Only One Wall - Posts Tagged "square-crayons"
Square Crayons Never Roll
Once upon a time Miss Billie wrote a few poems for a few children.
But the poems were incomplete. They needed pictures.
And so Miss Billie thought "I will become an artist! And I will make pictures to complete my poems!" And she did.
But the pictures and the poems were all scattered about on many different pieces of paper. So Miss Billie had an idea! She said, "I think I need to turn these papers into books."
And so she scanned the pictures into a computer and printed them out. Then she sewed them together and glued cardboard covers on them. Yes, she did indeed make books. Just like this:
But something was still missing. The children needed something to play with while reading her books. Miss Billie pondered and pondered and finally proclaimed: "children need puppets to go with the books!"
And Miss Billie decided that she needed to become a seamstress. She bought thread and felt and a sewing machine. And the author made puppets. And the children loved them!
But although the children loved the puppets, Miss Billie felt something was still missing. She wanted to give them something more creative. More artistic. And so she concluded that the children needed coloring books to match the books.
So she made those, too. When they were done, Miss Billie gave the coloring books and a box of crayons to the children and watched them. And as she did, she realized that something was very wrong.
One child began breaking crayons in half! Another child colored a crayon nib away within moments! And another child dumped the crayons onto the table and half of them rolled off the table and onto the floor! And the crayons were not even cute!
And so Miss Billie decided that she needed to become an inventor.
After several experiments, she landed on the idea of Square Crayons: they had four nibs, were very hard to break, and they did not roll! But the best part was that she could embed cute little pictures into the surface of the crayons.
Here is a photo of her first crayons:
She took the square crayons to a few craft fairs and people gathered around and played with them. And they said, "cool!" And they bought them!
But the crayons needed improvements. So Miss Billie spent several weeks experimenting with different methods and molds until she came up with sleeker and better crayons.
Here is a photo of the result:
At last Miss Billie took the crayons to the children. She watched them color. None of the crayons broke. None of them rolled off the table, and none of the nibs wore down! Ah this was very good!
As Miss Billie looked back at all of the things that she had made for the children: the poems, the books, the puppets, the coloring books, and finally, the Square Crayons, she realized that she had done a lot of work! But it was all worth it. And she finally decided that she was done.
So with sigh and a smile, she picked up her pen and began to write another poem...
But the poems were incomplete. They needed pictures.
And so Miss Billie thought "I will become an artist! And I will make pictures to complete my poems!" And she did.
But the pictures and the poems were all scattered about on many different pieces of paper. So Miss Billie had an idea! She said, "I think I need to turn these papers into books."
And so she scanned the pictures into a computer and printed them out. Then she sewed them together and glued cardboard covers on them. Yes, she did indeed make books. Just like this:
But something was still missing. The children needed something to play with while reading her books. Miss Billie pondered and pondered and finally proclaimed: "children need puppets to go with the books!"
And Miss Billie decided that she needed to become a seamstress. She bought thread and felt and a sewing machine. And the author made puppets. And the children loved them!
But although the children loved the puppets, Miss Billie felt something was still missing. She wanted to give them something more creative. More artistic. And so she concluded that the children needed coloring books to match the books.
So she made those, too. When they were done, Miss Billie gave the coloring books and a box of crayons to the children and watched them. And as she did, she realized that something was very wrong.
One child began breaking crayons in half! Another child colored a crayon nib away within moments! And another child dumped the crayons onto the table and half of them rolled off the table and onto the floor! And the crayons were not even cute!
And so Miss Billie decided that she needed to become an inventor.
After several experiments, she landed on the idea of Square Crayons: they had four nibs, were very hard to break, and they did not roll! But the best part was that she could embed cute little pictures into the surface of the crayons.
Here is a photo of her first crayons:
She took the square crayons to a few craft fairs and people gathered around and played with them. And they said, "cool!" And they bought them!
But the crayons needed improvements. So Miss Billie spent several weeks experimenting with different methods and molds until she came up with sleeker and better crayons.
Here is a photo of the result:
At last Miss Billie took the crayons to the children. She watched them color. None of the crayons broke. None of them rolled off the table, and none of the nibs wore down! Ah this was very good!
As Miss Billie looked back at all of the things that she had made for the children: the poems, the books, the puppets, the coloring books, and finally, the Square Crayons, she realized that she had done a lot of work! But it was all worth it. And she finally decided that she was done.
So with sigh and a smile, she picked up her pen and began to write another poem...
Published on August 24, 2014 20:39
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Tags:
cats, children, coloring-books, crayons, puppets, square-crayons
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