"Cornflower Blue, your turn!"
I was plucked from the crayon box, along with seven of my colorful colleagues, as tiny hands grabbed us excitedly. We were going to be part of a new masterpiece.
My name is Cornflower Blue. I'm a blue crayon, as you probably guessed. I've been drawn on all sorts of papers over the years - construction paper, notebook paper, easel paper. You name it, I've sketched across it. Each blank page holds the potential for a new adventure.
Today's paper was textured and bumpy, unlike the smooth sheets I was used to. But I didn't mind. It just meant I had more nooks and crannies to bring to life.
The young artist got straight to work, bearing down on me and my fellow crayons with enthusiasm. There was no plan, only joyful creation. I swirled and swooped, zigged and zagged, bringing form to an underwater scene. Bright coral reefs emerged under Yellow and Orange. Bubbles floated up with me and Periwinkle. A smiling crab took shape under Scarlet's diligent strokes.
Soon the paper was completely transformed into a vibrant seascape. Our work was done. We were cast back into the box, but the colorful memory of what we had created together lingered.
Over the next few weeks, I was summoned to illustrate all sorts of scenes. I added my deep blue hues to starry night skies, raging ocean waves, and the uniforms on stick-figure baseball teams. Though the drawings were simple, each one told a unique story that came alive through color.
One day, I was selected along with a team of other crayons to create a Mother's Day card. Working together, we rendered a beautiful portrait of a loving family. I helped capture the depth of the mother's affectionate eyes. It was the most realistic drawing I had ever been part of.
"We could be in museums!" I proclaimed to Red as we were stashed back in the box. "Don't get ahead of yourself, kid,"
"He muttered with an entertained sigh."
I didn't understand what he meant. Weren't the drawings we made together real art? Even if the artist was young, we had brought their imagination to life on the page. Wasn't that art?
My question was soon answered when I was picked up by bigger, more dexterous hands - those of a professional artist. I was whisked away to a studio, and for the first time met crayons who didn't live in boxes but in fancy tin trays. They called themselves pastels.
There, I helped add texture and depth to massive canvases covered in sophisticated compositions and advanced techniques. The pastels explained blending, shading, crosshatching to me. While the scale was so much larger, I realized the fundamentals were the same. We all channeled the vision of the artist through color and stroke.
After the demanding precision of the studio drawings, I was excited to return to my crayon box and share my new knowledge. But the little hands I had come to know never picked me up again. Months went by in darkness. I worried I would be trapped in the box forever.
Just as I was losing hope, the lid cracked open and light streamed in. I was picked up by a new child, much younger than my previous owner. His tiny fist could hardly even grip my wrapper.
As he scribbled back and forth with me, creating shapeless blobs of blue on the page, I felt a deep sense of joy. This took me back to the beginning - purely creative play, unburdened by plans or skill.
There was something special about helping a hand just learning to grasp color and form. The results weren't gallery-worthy creations, but they were imagination brought to life.
As I continue passing from hand to hand, box to box, I've come to appreciate each artistic stage. Whether it's a toddler's scribbles or a painter's precise still life, I'm proud to bring bursts of color to every blank canvas. Wherever I'm drawn next, my waxy heart is open and ready for a new splash of blue.