Few brands carry the kind of generational weight that Crayola does. The yellow-and-green box has been a fixture in classrooms, kitchens, and craft drawers for more than a century, which means any crayola video production project comes with a level of cultural responsibility most assignments do not. Color is not a backdrop here. It is the protagonist. So when our team got the chance to work on a campaign rooted in the brand, we approached it the same way we would approach a documentary subject we deeply admired: carefully, with respect for the source material, and with a willingness to throw out our first instincts if the brand demanded something more honest.
This post is a transparent walk-through of how C&I built the project from start to finish. We are going to share the brief, the pre-production decisions, the on-set choices, the post-production debates, and the distribution thinking that shaped the final cut. If you are a brand manager or producer wondering what working with us actually looks like on a creative-led campaign, this should give you a clear window into the process. And if you are simply curious about the craft of crayola video production, the same window applies.
The Brief That Started Everything
Every great project begins with a brief that resists oversimplification, and this one was no exception. The ask was not a single film. It was a small ecosystem: an anchor brand piece around two minutes long, three social cutdowns, a hero photography selection, and a behind-the-scenes capture that could be released later as supplemental content. The strategic goal was equally layered. The brand wanted to honor its legacy without leaning on nostalgia as a crutch, and it wanted to feel current to a younger audience without pandering. Walking that line is the actual job, and our creative leads spent the first kickoff session simply listening before pitching anything back.
We took the brief and ran it through our usual creative interrogation. What is the central tension? What is the emotional payoff? What does success look like in the room and on the metrics dashboard? Those questions guided the deck we returned with one week later. Rather than producing a single concept, we presented three distinct directions with different production scales and budgets, an approach we have refined across hundreds of brand collaborations under our video production services umbrella. The middle direction won, and we moved into pre-production within ten days of the briefing.
Pre-Production: Building the Color Bible
Most production companies start pre-production with a script. Our team started ours with a color bible. Crayola is not a brand you can shoot generically and grade into shape later; the color decisions have to be baked into wardrobe, set dressing, props, lighting gels, and even the texture of the surfaces being filmed. C&I Studios built a forty-page reference document that mapped every shot in the storyboard to a specific palette drawn from the brand’s actual crayon catalog. Periwinkle, dandelion, mahogany, robin’s-egg blue, and burnt sienna each got a row in a spreadsheet, with notes on which scenes would feature them and which fabrics, paints, or papers we would source to match them.
This was not an exercise in pedantry. When you are producing for a brand whose product is literally color, the difference between close enough and exact is the difference between a film that feels authentic and one that feels like an approximation. Our creative services team coordinated with the wardrobe stylist and the production designer to ensure that no single garment, prop, or backdrop fell outside the bible. We even pulled real crayons into the shoot kit so the on-set art department could match new pickups against the original references in real time.
Casting moved in parallel. We met with over fifty children, ten adult artists, and three educators, eventually narrowing to a cast that felt unforced and genuinely diverse in age, ethnicity, and creative discipline. Casting children for brand work demands particular care: chemistry on camera matters, but so does temperament across a long shoot day, parental availability, and the legal framework around minors in production. We have built a workflow for this kind of casting that goes well beyond the standard tape-and-callback format, and it served us well here.
Why Crayola Video Production Demands a Different Mindset
People sometimes assume that crayola video production is an easy assignment because the brand is fun. The opposite is true. When the product is universally beloved, the floor for what is acceptable is much higher than it would be for a less-saturated brand category. Audiences have a relationship with Crayola that they bring to every frame, and any visual choice that breaks the spell registers immediately. That dynamic shaped our approach to nearly every department on this project.
Take lighting, for example. A typical commercial lighting setup leans on key, fill, and a backlight that pops the subject off the background. That formula would have looked wrong here. We wanted the light to feel like it was emanating from the work itself: a child’s drawing, a mural, a box of crayons spread across a kitchen table. So we built practical sources into the set, hiding LED panels inside paper sculptures and bouncing tungsten through translucent paper to mimic the warmth of late-afternoon classroom light. The result was an image that felt closer to a children’s book illustration than to a commercial, which was exactly the brief.
The same mindset applied to camera movement. Many brand films lean on slick gimbal work and crane moves to add production value. We pulled back from that instinct. For the anchor piece, more than half the setups were locked-off or used minimal handheld drift, allowing the color and the action inside the frame to carry the energy. When we did move the camera, the moves were motivated by the storytelling, not added for visual flourish. Anyone reading this who has worked with brand teams knows how often that discipline gets overruled by stakeholders who equate movement with energy. Our producers protected the creative on this one.

The Production Days: On Set in Studio
We shot the project across four production days at our Fort Lauderdale facility, which gave us the square footage to build three distinct sets without having to strike between them. The thirty-thousand-square-foot footprint is one of the reasons we book multi-set commercial work into the South Florida location: collapsing travel between locations means more shooting hours per day, which translates into either more coverage or earlier wraps for a young cast. On a project with kids, those earlier wraps matter. There is a finite number of usable hours before fatigue starts showing up on camera, and respecting those hours is a craft skill of its own.
Day one was the kitchen-table set, the most domestic of the three environments. The camera team pulled an Alexa Mini LF with a set of vintage Cooke S4i primes, a combination C&I has come to trust for projects that need warmth without softness. The vintage glass gave us the gentle falloff and color rendition we wanted, and the digital body provided the dynamic range to protect highlights when the practical sources got hot. Our director of photography spent the first hour of the day with the production designer fine-tuning the placement of practicals before we ran a single take.
Day two was the classroom set, with the largest cast of the shoot. We had five child performers, two adult educators, and a handful of background pieces that the art department had assembled to feel real rather than dressed. One of the principles we learned years ago is that classrooms in commercials almost always look fake because they are too clean, too coordinated, and too on-brand. We deliberately brought in scuffed desks, asymmetric bulletin-board art, and a few props that did not match the dominant palette, just to keep the environment from tipping into uncanny territory.
Day three pivoted to the artist studio set, which featured an adult muralist and a small crew of teenage assistants. Here, the lighting got moodier, the camera moves got more deliberate, and the audio team had to manage the live painting sounds, which we wanted to capture cleanly for a possible texture layer in the edit. Our audio engineering services team brought in lavaliers, a boom, and a dedicated room mic for ambient color, giving the post team three independent sources to mix from later.
Day four was a half-day pickup and a dedicated photography block. Our professional photography services team had been on set throughout the week capturing supplemental stills, but day four was reserved for hero portraits of the cast and detailed product photography that the brand could repurpose across web, social, and print. Building photography into the production schedule rather than treating it as a separate engagement is one of the easiest ways to maximize the value of a single day on set, and it is something we recommend on almost every commercial campaign we estimate.
Working with Talent: Kids, Artists, and Real Hands
The cast on this project ranged from six-year-olds to seasoned working artists, and each tier required a different kind of direction. With the child performers, our director leaned on play. Rather than feeding lines or staging precise blocking, we let them draw, paint, and converse, capturing real reactions and real exchanges. The script existed as a scaffold, but the moments we used in the final cut were almost entirely improvised within that structure. This kind of approach is more aligned with our documentary film production instincts than with traditional commercial directing, and it produced footage that felt genuinely alive.
The adult artist, by contrast, needed almost no direction. We met with her three weeks before the shoot, walked her through the emotional arc of the brand piece, and trusted her to bring her practice into the frame on shoot day. The mural she painted on camera was real, started and finished within the production window, and it appears in the anchor cut as a continuous time-lapse cut against the kitchen and classroom material. Working with practitioners who actually do the thing rather than actors pretending to do the thing is a choice we make whenever the scene calls for it, and the difference is immediately visible.
Talent management on a multi-day shoot also means logistics. Our production team handled call sheets, transportation, dietary needs, on-set tutoring for the minors, and the inevitable schedule reshuffles when one cast member arrived late or another finished their work early. A disciplined production office is invisible when it works and catastrophic when it does not, and we put real resources into making sure ours was the former.
Sound Design and the Music That Moves Color
Sound on a brand project is often treated as the last department to think about, which is exactly why so many otherwise beautiful films feel hollow. C&I approached the audio work for this campaign as a peer to the visuals, not an afterthought. The composer we partnered with came in during pre-production rather than post, allowing him to score against storyboards and animatics rather than locked picture. That sequencing meant the music shaped the edit as much as the edit shaped the music, and the final piece moved with a cohesion that feels rare in branded work.
The score itself blended live instruments with playful percussive elements built from sounds we recorded on set: pencils tapping, scissors snipping, paper folding, crayons rolling across a table. Those Foley-style textures became a signature of the piece, threading a tactile sensory layer through the music that reinforced the brand’s identity without ever stating it explicitly. According to the Audio Engineering Society, the integration of practical sound recording with composed music has become an increasingly common practice in branded content over the past decade, and our experience on this project supports the trend.
The mix itself happened across three sessions. The first balanced dialogue and ambience for the long-form anchor piece. The second optimized for muted social viewing, where music and on-screen text have to carry the load because most audiences scroll without sound. The third created a versioned mix for cinema and large-format installations, with extended low-frequency information for venue playback. Delivering three distinct mixes from a single project is standard practice for us when the campaign lives across this many platforms, and our post-production services workflow has the bandwidth to support it.
Post-Production: Where the Magic Becomes Measurable
The edit room is where a project either delivers on its brief or quietly disappoints. For this campaign, our editorial team worked across two parallel tracks: a long-form anchor cut and a series of social cutdowns derived from the same footage. Treating those tracks as parallel rather than sequential is something we have learned the hard way; if you cut the long form first and try to derive social from it, the cutdowns will always feel like leftovers. We assigned a separate editor to the social pieces from day one of post, and the two leads compared notes daily.
Color correction was its own multi-week chapter. Given the importance of the palette, we color-graded each format independently. The anchor piece received a cinematic grade with extended highlight roll-off and gentle saturation, optimized for a streaming and broadcast viewing context. The social cutdowns received a punchier, more saturated grade that would survive the algorithmic compression that social platforms apply on upload. Both grades referenced the same color bible, but their interpretations differed enough that side-by-side comparison would reveal the difference.

Motion graphics carried part of the storytelling load as well. We used a light touch on type, allowing color and texture to do most of the brand work, but we did integrate a short sequence of animated illustrations that bridged two live-action segments in the anchor piece. Our 2D animation and motion design team built that sequence from hand-drawn frames scanned and assembled in After Effects, intentionally preserving the imperfections that come with traditional animation. A clean digital sequence would have been faster, but it would also have felt sterile against the texture-rich live action.
VFX was minimal by design. There were a handful of cleanup tasks: rig removal on a few crane shots, a window replacement to fix a problematic reflection, and some subtle wire-removal work where a paint cup had been suspended for a specific gag. Our VFX and compositing team handled all of it without ever calling attention to itself, which is how good VFX should function in this kind of work.
Distribution: Where the Films Lived After Wrap
Producing the films was only half the job. The other half was making sure they reached the audiences they were built for, in the formats those audiences would actually watch. The anchor piece launched on the brand’s owned channels and on a limited connected-television buy, with a longer runtime intentionally preserved to let the storytelling breathe. We have seen too many brands cut their hero films down to thirty seconds out of distribution anxiety, and the result is almost always a weaker piece. If you have built a two-minute story, distribute it as a two-minute story; the viewers who will engage with the brand at that depth will reward the runtime with attention you cannot buy.
The social cutdowns were the workhorses. We delivered nine total: three at fifteen seconds, three at thirty seconds, and three at sixty seconds, each tuned for a specific platform and audience segment. Our social media marketing services team partnered with the brand’s internal social leads to map a publishing calendar that staggered the releases over six weeks, building momentum rather than dumping all the content into a single launch window. According to a Think with Google report on video viewing behavior, audiences increasingly engage with brand content as a series of touchpoints rather than a single ad event, and that observation guided the calendar.
Photography assets ran in parallel. Hero stills landed in retail point-of-sale displays, on the brand’s homepage, and across paid social as carousel content. Behind-the-scenes capture became its own deliverable, packaged as a five-minute mini-documentary that lived on the brand’s YouTube channel and on internal stakeholder communications. That kind of content multiplication is something we plan for in our branded content series approach, ensuring that a single shoot week can fuel a quarter or more of communications activity.
What We Learned, and What We Would Do Again
Every project leaves us with a list of things to bring forward and a smaller list of things to do differently. The biggest takeaway from this project was that color discipline pays off. The hours C&I Studios spent in pre-production building the color bible saved us multiples of those hours in post. When the grade started, we were calibrating a palette that had already been established correctly on set, rather than fighting the footage to make it match a brand standard.
The second takeaway was about treating talent as collaborators rather than assets. The improvised moments we captured with the children were not in any version of the script, but they became the emotional center of the anchor piece. The mural the artist painted on camera was real work, and the audience can sense that. Whenever we have the chance to cast practitioners and let them practice rather than perform, the results are stronger and the production is faster, even if the casting process takes a bit longer up front.
The third takeaway was about parallel post tracks. Cutting long-form and social simultaneously rather than sequentially produced better social pieces, and it kept the editorial team energized. C&I Studios has already adopted this as a standard workflow for any campaign that includes both formats, and we would recommend it to any brand running a multi-format release.
If you are considering a campaign of similar scope, we would be glad to talk through how the approach above might map to your brand. You can reach our team through the contact page, or browse more of our work in our work gallery to see how we have approached other commercial and corporate productions. Whether your project leans toward corporate video production, narrative work rooted in content creation services, or something in between, the same discipline that shaped this crayola video production assignment shapes the rest of our work as well.






















