![]() ![]() ![]() I didn't use them again until I bought my set of Cretacolor Aqua Stic watersoluble oil pastels. I set them aside, meaning to do something serious with them sometime since they were probably good student grade supplies. I hadn't used my Loew-Cornell oil pastels in years so my expectation for hardness of this type of product was much on the hard side. Used with nonwatersoluble crayons, they could produce some interesting partial-wash effects. A color list is in the cover in several languages, these are shipped all over the world. Loew-Cornell Aqua Crayons looked like oil pastels with round wrapped sticks flat at each end. I was pleased with the set and tested it out in my sketchbook. A heavy duty hinged-lid tin has a white styrene tray inside to hold the crayons with a pony or camel hair blunt watercolor wash brush in its groove and a small palette area for mixing. Once it arrived, I noticed it had much better packaging than the Loew-Cornell oil pastels. The price both retail and even on Clearance was higher than most of the cheap brands of student grade oil pastels. I bought these some months ago in a set of 30 on Clearance from Dick Blick, they looked interesting and I wondered if they'd be anything like my old set of Caran d'Ache Neocolor II watersoluble artist crayons. Loew-Cornell Aqua Crayons are much harder than Loew-Cornell oil pastels, more like wax crayons in texture. Sloan in Loew-Cornell Aqua Crayons used dry on ProArt sketchbook. Product Review: Loew-Cornell Aqua CrayonsĪpple Blossoms by Robert A. ![]()
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