Crayola video production is not as simple as pointing a camera at someone coloring with crayons. When one of the most iconic children’s brands in the world reaches out for a content partnership, you realize quickly that the stakes are different. Crayola carries decades of emotional memory for consumers, the kind of brand equity that takes generations to build. The video has to feel warm and genuine without being saccharine. It has to appeal to parents making purchasing decisions while simultaneously delighting the kids who will use the product. That balance is hard to strike, and it is exactly the kind of challenge our team at C&I Studios came to this project ready to solve.
This post breaks down how we approached, planned, and executed video production for Crayola, from the first creative brief to the final exported files. If you are a brand manager evaluating production partners, or a creative professional curious about how large consumer brand productions actually work behind the scenes, this is the inside view.
The Brief: What Crayola Needed
When Crayola’s creative team first reached out, they came with a clear vision and an equally clear problem. They needed video content that could work across multiple channels: a long-form brand spot, social-cut versions optimized for Instagram and TikTok, and product-forward clips for retail and e-commerce placements. One shoot, multiple deliverables. That kind of efficiency is exactly what our content creation services are designed for.
The brief called for real children using Crayola products in real creative moments, none of the overly staged, stock-photo energy that dominates much of the category. Crayola’s brand team was specific: they wanted authentic creative expression caught on camera, not performed for one. That nuance matters more than it sounds. Getting genuine creative moments from children on a production set requires a very particular approach to direction, lighting, and pacing.
Secondary to the child-focused content, they needed an aspirational visual language for the product itself. Macro shots of crayons, saturated color progressions, textured paper surfaces catching light. The kind of imagery that makes a box of crayons look like an art supply worth coveting. This overlapped naturally with our professional photography services, so the production scope expanded to include a dedicated still photography component alongside the video work.
Pre-Production: Building the Right Plan
A brand like Crayola does not hand you a set key and walk away. Their team is involved, opinionated, and collaborative, which is exactly what good clients should be. Pre-production started with two rounds of concept presentations, one for the brand team and one for their marketing leadership. We used those sessions to align on visual references, talent direction, color palette choices, and the technical specifications for each deliverable format.
Location scouting happened in parallel with concept development. We considered three options: our 30,000 sq ft Fort Lauderdale facility, a location build in a residential space to simulate a home creative environment, and a purpose-built classroom set. The brand team ultimately preferred the warmth and control of our studio, which gave our gaffer and lighting team full freedom to design the look rather than adapt to whatever natural light happened to be available that day.
Shot lists for child-focused productions require a different level of detail than standard commercial work. Children work in short windows of genuine engagement. You cannot run thirty takes of the same moment and hope to find performance in the footage later. Our film production services team built a coverage plan that anticipated multiple natural entry points for each creative moment, so the camera team could capture organic reactions from several angles without requiring the kids to repeat themselves fifteen times.
We also coordinated with Crayola’s product team on prop inventory. For a product shoot of this scale, the actual product counts: which specific SKUs appear on camera, how they are staged relative to the talent, whether packaging is visible and how legible it reads in frame. All of this is agreed upon in writing during pre-production so there are no surprises when you are standing on set with a room full of child talent, parents, brand representatives, and crew.
Talent: Casting Real Creative Kids
Child talent is its own specialty. Casting the right kids for a Crayola shoot means looking beyond the standard commercial casting metrics of photogenic faces and quick recall of direction. You want children who actually like making things. Kids who get genuinely absorbed in a drawing or a coloring project and forget that a camera exists. That quality is not something you can direct into existence.
Our casting process prioritized children with documented creative backgrounds, whether that was art classes, school projects, or simply enthusiastic parent testimonials about how their kid spends Saturday mornings. We ran a relaxed casting session that was more like a playtime observation than a traditional audition. We set up art stations and watched. The kids who naturally leaned in, who picked up a crayon and started drawing without being told to, those were the ones who made the final call sheet.
Working with child talent also means working with their families. Parents are on set throughout production. Our production coordinator built a parent communication plan that set expectations before day one: call times, break schedules, the general format of the day, how long any individual child would be needed on camera. When families feel informed and respected, children tend to arrive in a better headspace. Simple logistics, but the kind of detail that separates smooth child productions from chaotic ones.
Production Day: Inside the Studio

Set build started the evening before principal photography. Our art department constructed two distinct environments inside the studio: a warmly lit home creative space with a wooden table, art supplies, and soft ambient textures, and a more vibrant, color-saturated product display environment for the macro work. Both sets shared a consistent color language drawn directly from Crayola’s brand palette, which ensured that even cutaway shots would feel tonally unified with the talent footage.
We used a combination of large-format LED panels and practical lighting sources to keep the look feeling natural without sacrificing exposure control. Child subjects respond better to environments that feel normal, so we deliberately avoided the heavy footprint of traditional commercial lighting rigs. The result is footage that reads as bright and inviting rather than heavily lit, even though the technical setup was precise to within a stop.
The camera package was built around a shallow-depth-of-field look that keeps the creative product in focus while letting the environment fall into a soft supporting role. We shot anamorphic on the primary coverage for the long-form brand spot, then shifted to a spherical lens package for the social cuts, which compress differently in vertical formats. This kind of lens strategy is something our video production services team builds into every multi-format production from day one rather than as an afterthought in post.
Audio on a child production is almost always a secondary creative element rather than a primary one, since most brand spots in this category are scored rather than dialogue-driven. We still ran a full audio setup and captured ambient sound from the set, including the genuine sounds of crayon on paper, children talking to themselves while they draw, the shuffle of paper and the soft click of crayon caps. These texture recordings ended up being some of the most valuable raw material from the entire production, layered under the final mix to create authenticity that no sound library can replicate.
Post-Production: Where the Crayola Look Came Together
The Crayola brand is fundamentally about color, which makes the color grade one of the most consequential creative decisions in any Crayola video production. Our post-production services team started color work with an extensive reference pass, reviewing the brand’s existing video assets and print materials to understand the specific hue relationships and saturation levels that define Crayola’s visual identity.
The grade needed to accomplish two things simultaneously. First, it needed to make the product color accurate. Crayola’s signature colors, the specific reds, blues, and yellows in their classic 64-count box, are recognizable to the point of being cultural shorthand. Any shift in those hues and the product reads wrong, which is a brand integrity issue the client rightly cares about deeply. Second, the overall image needed warmth and life. A clinically accurate product grade can make footage feel cold and commercial in a way that undercuts the emotional storytelling.
We solved this by building separate grade paths for product close-ups versus talent footage, then using a careful blend to transition between them within the edit. The product shots get a more precise, controlled grade. The talent footage gets a warmer, slightly lifted treatment that makes the kids look like they are having a genuinely good time, because they were. The blended result holds together as a unified visual world across the full cut.
Our VFX and compositing team handled a handful of cleanup tasks: wire removal from a rig shot, a brand logo integration in the final card, and some product label compositing for a sequence where the camera needed to move through a product display at a speed that made practical label placement impractical. None of it was heavy VFX work, but the precision required on brand asset integration in consumer product content is significant.
The edit itself went through four rounds of client review, which is fairly standard for a brand of Crayola’s scale. Each round sharpened the storytelling without fundamentally changing the creative vision established during pre-production. When pre-production alignment is done well, the edit process tends to be refinement rather than reinvention. That held true here.
Music supervision for the brand spot involved licensing a piece that felt playful without being condescending. A common trap in children’s brand content is defaulting to overly simple, sing-song tracks that adults find irritating and children have already outgrown. The brief called for something that parents would not skip while still feeling age-appropriate for the primary audience. Our audio engineering services team sourced and licensed a track that threads that needle well, and the client approved it on the first round of music options presented.
Deliverables: Formats Built for Every Platform
The final deliverable package for this Crayola video production included more than thirty individual files. The long-form brand spot at 90 seconds in 16:9 for broadcast and web. A 30-second cut optimized for YouTube pre-roll. Multiple versions in 9:16 for Instagram Reels and TikTok, each with platform-specific title-safe adjustments to ensure no critical visual information landed in the swipe-up zones or caption overlay areas. Product-forward cuts in 1:1 for e-commerce placements. And a full set of raw color-corrected selects for Crayola’s internal use in future content needs.
Delivering to this many platforms requires a finishing workflow that is organized at the asset level rather than the sequence level. Each format has its own technical spec document, its own export preset, and its own QC checklist. It is not glamorous post-production work, but it is where productions either maintain their quality through to the client’s hands or quietly degrade. Getting the final mile right is something our team takes seriously.
Our social media marketing services team consulted on the social cuts to make sure the creative choices we were making in the edit aligned with current platform best practices. Vertical video has its own visual grammar, separate from traditional widescreen storytelling: keeping motion toward the center of frame, front-loading the most visually interesting moment, making sure the first two seconds earn the watch without relying on audio. These are learnable disciplines, and having our social team in the room during the finishing pass made a measurable difference in the final cuts.

Results: What the Content Did in Market
Brand campaigns of this scale typically have a six to twelve week market window before results data becomes meaningful. What we can share from the Crayola engagement reflects well on the production investment. The long-form brand spot saw completion rates well above industry benchmarks for brand video in the children’s products category, according to Crayola’s internal analytics team. The social cuts drove engagement metrics that outperformed the client’s previous campaign by a meaningful margin.
More qualitatively, the feedback from Crayola’s brand team cited the authenticity of the child performances as the key differentiator. In a category full of produced-looking kids doing performed things on camera, content that shows real creative absorption reads differently to parents. It feels honest. That outcome traced directly to the casting process and the production environment choices made in pre-production, not to anything that can be added in post.
Crayola is a legacy brand with a history spanning over 120 years. Producing content for brands at that scale is one of the things our advertising services team finds genuinely motivating, not just because of the client name but because of the production challenges that come with legacy brand responsibility. You are not just making a video. You are making a piece of brand communication that has to honor a long relationship consumers have with that brand while also pushing the creative forward enough to stay relevant.
What Makes Consumer Brand Video Different
Producing for a consumer brand like Crayola is a different discipline than corporate video production or even general branded content series work. The primary difference is the density of stakeholder involvement. Consumer brands have brand teams, marketing teams, legal teams, and sometimes external agency partners, all with input on creative decisions. Managing that input without losing creative momentum is a production management skill as much as a creative one.
Another key difference is the precision required around product representation. In corporate communications or thought leadership content, if a background detail is slightly off, it rarely matters. In consumer product video, if the product looks wrong, is poorly lit, is out of focus at the wrong moment, or appears in a context that feels inconsistent with brand positioning, the entire piece is compromised. That level of attention to product integrity runs through every department on a consumer brand production, from art department to camera to post.
Consumer brand content also tends to have the longest approval chains of any production category. Legal review, brand standards review, marketing alignment, executive sign-off. Understanding how to structure the delivery and review process to keep these chains moving without creating bottlenecks is something that comes from experience producing at this level. According to HubSpot’s marketing research, video content consistently outperforms static assets across engagement, retention, and conversion metrics for consumer brands. For a brand like Crayola with strong emotional resonance, video carries an additional multiplier: the combination of movement, color, music, and authentic performance activates the emotional memory consumers already have with the brand, which drives purchase intent in ways that static content rarely matches.
Why C&I for Consumer Brand Production
Facility scale matters in consumer brand work. Our 30,000 sq ft studio gives production teams room to build multiple sets simultaneously without striking one to build another. It means controlled loading access for large product inventory. It means the infrastructure that keeps professional productions running on schedule, which is where budgets get protected. C&I Studios was built around the needs of exactly this kind of production.
Our client roster gives context to the level at which we actually operate. Nike, Coca-Cola, AT&T, the NFL, NBC, H&M, Calvin Klein, SiriusXM. These are not clients who tolerate production partners learning on the job. The work has to be right on the first pass, or very close to it. That standard of execution is what our team brings to every project, whether the brand name is one of the above or a brand making their first significant video investment.
Our creative services team covers the full production spectrum from initial concept through final delivery, which means a single partner relationship rather than the coordination overhead of assembling multiple vendors. For consumer brands managing complex approval chains, that matters operationally. A project that touches motion design, live action, and platform-specific finishing can stay under one roof through every phase.
We operate across Fort Lauderdale, Los Angeles, and New York, which means we can support brands wherever their internal teams are based and wherever the production needs to happen. For clients evaluating a video production partner in Fort Lauderdale, or looking at options in Los Angeles or New York, our multi-market footprint is a practical advantage, not just a talking point. The full scope of what we have produced for consumer brands and other clients across categories is available at our work. To talk through what a production like this might look like for your brand, reach out through our contact page. Our team responds quickly, and the initial conversation is always worth having.






















