Crayon-Piece Muffins

We tried a craft project to make new crayons out of old crayons.

The intent of the project was to be able to use the bits of crayon that accumulate in the crayon bucket after a length of time. In general, a crayon either breaks (most likely) or get used so much that there is a very short piece of crayon that is hard to hold and therefore hard to use. No one uses it, but no one wants to throw it away because it possibly could be used. Okay, I do know some people who would have no problem tossing them out but they are not blood relatives.

My wife found some directions for the project, and they went a little something like this:

  • Take the wrappers off the crayons
  • If they are not already tiny, break the crayons into tiny bits
    box of broken, peeled crayons
  • Put them into a muffin tin that has been sprayed with non-stick stuff
    muffin tin of broken, peeled crayons
  • Put the whole thing into the over for 10 minutes at 200 degrees.
    muffin tin of melted crayons
  • After it has cooled, put out the brand-new circle crayons
    new crayon made from melted crayons

The directions were fine, and the result was mostly as expected. But there were some glitches. In order to be helpful to those of you who may be interested in trying this craft, I am providing these hints and tips. Learn from our mistakes.

  1. Do not mix types/brands of crayons. We just had a crayon bucket that had crayons from the store, free crayons from restaurants, random crayons that just appeared in the minivan, etc. They were not all made out of the same formulation and they did not all melt at the same rate. Some didn’t even melt at all while others were as liquidy as could be.
  2. The kids aren’t strong enough to break them into small enough pieces. Either get some kids with really good hand strength to help, or provide the smaller kids with some tools to help (meat grinder, nutcracker, etc.) Otherwise they will just peel the wrappers and your thumbs will be sore from all the crayon-breaking.
  3. The wrappers don’t come off the old crayons very easily. I don’t know of a method to help (maybe soaking them in water first?), but for a lot of the crayons it seemed that the wrappers had fused with the crayon itself. Use only crayons that have already lost their wrappers, or bring a vegetable peeler to help..
  4. This project doesn’t produce usable crayons, but it is useful as an art project. The circles that it produced did not draw very well, but they did make interesting designs. Use this project more as a way to fill an afternoon and learn about color design than as a way to make crayons that the kids will use.

“The mountains melted like wax at the presence of the LORD, At the presence of the Lord of the whole earth.”
– Psalm 97:5

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This little article thingy was written by Some Guy sometime around 6:32 pm and has been carefully placed in the Fun category.

2 Responses to “Crayon-Piece Muffins”

  1. Phoebe Says:

    What a crafty family you are.

  2. Burrill Says:

    I have faint (but fond) memories of using a griddle to have fun with melting crayons. That way, you get to enjoy the crayons as they melt instead of just watching, so it’s a little more interactive.

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