Taco
and Paprika? Binney & Smith Sees Thousands of Names for Red
By Dean Starkman, The Wall Street Journal. July 27, 1999
EASTON, Pa. - Only twice in its 114-year history has Binney &
Smith Inc. changed the name of one of its Crayola crayons. In 1958,
Prussian Blue became Midnight Blue, because children didn't know
where Prussia was. About four years later, amid growing consciousness
about civil rights, Flesh became Peach.
So earlier this year, when the company
yielded to years of complaints that Indian Red was being misconstrued
as a reference to Native American's skin color, it announced a contest
to pick a new name.
Winners aren't promised much a certificate
and an assortment of Crayola products. Still, more than 100,000
people flooded the company's headquarters here with more than 300,000
suggestions. Ideas arrived neatly typed or painstakingly scrawled
in crayon; some came with photographs of houses, canyons and dogs.
One arrived with a 19th-century Indian Head penny, another with
a squashed ladybug.
Indian Red's real namesake the color
of clay found in India is a brownish sort of red, which many
of the suggestions reflected. Among them: Paprika, Auburn Red, Bard
Red and Castilian Brown. Also, Caramel, Henna, IncREDible, Sedona,
Coq Au Vin, Brown Bubble, Pork-N-Beans and Cherry Mocha Scream.
Then there were redder red names, like
Fully Red, Ripest Red, Rupture Red, Red Rupture, Red Force, Red
Melon, Red Explosion, Red Ants, Red, rain, Red Kiss, Red Wish, Red
Star, Mission Red, Stoplight Red, Stop-Sign Red, Sunset Red, Setting-Sun
Red, Meatballs & Spaghetti, Red Drizzle, Red Taco and Mars Red.
A Bishop, Calif., woman sent more than
400 ideas, including head-scratchers like Amboyna, Arches, Grouper,
Fred, FRED, Liver, Olen, Pigweed, Ubar and Zarza. Eggheads sent
names derived from Greek and Latin. Among the more gothic entries:
Bat's Blood and Chokeberry. Smart alecks suggested Not Blue.
Binney & Smith staffers narrowed the
entries to 500, then to a final 11. Last month, a 12-member "creativity
team" met at the company's headquarters to analyze the lot.
Red Rooster, Earth Red and four others
were eliminated as too red-sounding. "If you've seen Adobe,
it's pinkish," said one committee member. "Autumn to me
is so many colors," said another.
Finally, they settled on a winner, a name
suggested by 155 contestants, who will be notified by letter today.
It meets the company's "appropriateness" standards and
it isn't likely to offend anyone.
The winner is: Chestnut.
Note: Karen is the Bishop, California
woman referenced above. Some of her other names are also mentioned
elsewhere in the article.
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