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The corresponding numbers of each color of Faber-Castell's 24 classic colored pencils

401-white, 407-lemon yellow, 409-orange yellow, 414-dark orange, 416-cinnabar red

421-bright red, 427-rose red, 429-pink madder , 430-light flesh color, 437-purple

445-lake blue, 447-sky blue, 451-plain blue, 457-dark green, 459-dark green, 463-emerald green

470 -Apple green, 478-ochre, 480-raw brown, 483-earth yellow, 487-yellow brown, 496-cold gray, 499-black

The white in the 24-color classic series is 401, and the ocher (red ocher ) color corresponds to color number 478, and the 24-color classic series does not include purple.

Extended information:

The 36-color classic series includes purple, and the color number is 433.

The Story of Faber-Castell

Ideas, talents, and a well-known name occupy an important position in today's international market.

Faber-Castell is a stationery brand that represents high-quality writing and painting. These products are indispensable tools for everyone's daily life.

The company’s founding roots can be traced back to 1761. At that time, KASPARFABER, a kitchen cabinet manufacturer in Germany, came up with the idea to produce his first pencil. His ideas sparked the creation of a global business empire.

After that, descendants of the Faber family continued to operate the KASPARFABER pencil factory in the town of Stein near Nuremberg. In 1840, LOTHARVON FABER, the fourth generation heir of the FABER family, took over the family pencil business at the age of 22. At that time, he was in Paris and had only a simple plan in his mind. He was determined to reform the business. , making the hexagonal pencil he produced the first high-quality pencil in Germany.

LOTHERFABER branded this new series of pencils with the A.W. FABER trademark, becoming the company's first brand of pencils. With the increasing demand for high-quality pencils in other countries, LOTHERFABER took the opportunity to set up A.W. FABER subsidiaries in the United States and Paris. This action turned A.W. FABER into an international brand.

In 1851, LOTHERFABER made history again by defining the length and thickness of pencils and the hardness of lead. Today, his specifications have been accepted by peers around the world.

In 1898, LOTHER FABETR's granddaughter, who was also the sole heir to A.W. FABER's prosperous pencil business, married Count Alexander Ludenhausen, causing the Faber Company's name to be changed to Faber-Castell.

Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia-Faber-Castell