For over 100 years, American kids have used Crayola branded crayons to color their world. Over the years, Crayola has tried to penetrate various international markets and establish Crayola branded products beyond the USA.
Searching for various color equivalents of Crayola crayons in German proved to be a challenge, and the “collection hoarder” part of my brain went down a rabbit hole to see what other languages I could find the crayon names in. That list is below. I tried to put everything into one elegant spreadsheet, but the resultant table was way too big for this site, so I had to parse the crayon names into individual languages:
