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Faber Castell F110012 Polychromos Colour Pencils Tin Of 12

  • Based on 8,878 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Sunday, Sep 22
Order within 16 hours and 33 minutes
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Size: 1 Count (Pack of 1)


Features

  • Unsurpassed lightfast pigments
  • Break resistant tips
  • Waterproof
  • Non-smudge
  • Color matched to all other Faber-Castell lines

Description

Faber Castell Polychromos Pencils are made with superior pigments of unsurpassed light-fastness and brilliance. Thick leads are smudgeproof and water-resistant. Intense colors go on smooth. Metal tin set of 12 assorted colors.

Brand: Faber-Castell


Writing Instrument Form: Colored Pencil


Color: Multi


Ink Color: assorted Colors


Age Range (Description): Adult


Manufacturer: ‎Faber-Castell


Brand: ‎Faber-Castell


Item Weight: ‎6 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎4.13 x 7.28 x 0.47 inches


Item model number: ‎F110012


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Color: ‎Multi


Pencil Lead Degree (Hardness): ‎H


Material Type: ‎Metal


Number of Items: ‎1


Size: ‎1 Count (Pack of 1)


Point Type: ‎Thick


Ink Color: ‎assorted Colors


Manufacturer Part Number: ‎F110012


Date First Available: December 28, 2007


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Sep 22

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Excellent quality Professional oil based pencils.
Size: 1 Count (Pack of 1)
As a life long artist and fan of coloring I use colored pencils quite a bit as my medium of choice. I am also am admitted pencil hoarder and have tried several dozens of different brands trying to find the perfect pencil, and while I have come close to finding it on a few occasions I often felt I was missing out on the professional pencils I used during my art school years which were Faber Castells. I purchased this smaller tin set before splurging for the 120 set to be sure that these would be what I long remembered, in fact they are. These pencils, like so many artists and colorists describe, are really soft and buttery to use. The cores are durable and retain a nice point when compared to the softer counter part brands which are wax based. These sharpen without any issues, the tips do not break when using a sharp, clean blade, quality pencil sharpener. Because these are oil based cores and are hard so to speak they produce more color with less lead than wax based cores, in other words my comparable name brand wax brands and not so name brands are constantly needing sharpened which in turn ends up wasting lead, these pencils do not. These pencils do lay down well and blend quite well, colors are rich and vibrant, and even with a small set of 12, you can obtain many different hues and or colors by layering. There is no doubt that this is "the" best professional set of pencils to own. Pricey? Yes, but worth every single penny. I am so happy with these pencils that I purchased the 120 set and can't wait for it to arrive. It is worth noting that working with quality oil based pencil is a different experience than wax based and so if you are in doubt I do suggest you purchase the 12 count tin set for yourself and see if you enjoy them as much as I and thousands of others do. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2017 by IHeartArt

  • Converting from Prismacolor- Here's Why
Size: 120 Count (Pack of 1)
This set is the best colored pencils ever produced. Let me explain the big reasons why, from where I'm coming from. I have been a hardcore Prismacolor fan from 2001 onward, and their quality has gone extremely downhill. Originally Prismas were made by Sanford which then became bought out by Rubbermaid-Newell. Their products are now consistently off-center (making sharpening hell- you repetitively lose segments of leads which can then only be used by fingertip and friction action), the leads are brittle, they only take 4-6 layers with extreme pressure which makes their colors harder if not nigh-impossible to blend smoothly (and the colorless blender is a joke- picks up colors, etc), and the wax bloom is *ridiculous*, which- if you're sharing your work online- makes decent scanning somewhat troublesome despite excellent DPI. (That's a whole other side topic.) I just got this set of Polychromos for Christmas as a gift, and I'm not looking back at Prisma. Polychromos (Let's call 'em FC for short after the company name) are awesome. There's a really insignificant amount of bloom, but it's an oil base so this really isn't an issue. The laydown is even more buttery than Prisma. They are softer due to the oil-base, and the colors are very rich. Quirks I discovered were the names. I'm coming from a Prisma background so to me, "Pompeian Red" is "Salmon", and "Mauve" is actually their very rich purple hue- which to my former mindset is usually that pale pink/lavender mixup color. So the names will take some getting used to since they're more in line with "painterly" names such as Pthalo Blue, Hooker's Green, etc. So that at least will benefit you if you come from a painting experience. (I do also so it's at least semifamiliar, but still something to get used to). It says something when I have six of the same colored pencil by Prisma and they're all in various states of use/disrepair/broken- and the money behind that does add up. It's frustrating to say the very least, and although that company accommodated my needs by fixing the issue every time (which was often!!) I had flawed items that were interfering with my professional work, honestly just go for the FCs- they're a lot higher quality, plus the leads are bonded and securely centered as well as 3.8mm thick- thicker than say, Crayola (*gag*) colored pencil, so you're getting more product for the money and less wood (which, let's face it: is just a disposable casing). Same amount as per Prismas, but with much less breakage/sharpening issues. To clarify: Someone called Geri B. in the Q&A says that FC don't glue their polychromos pencils. From their own website: " SV Bonding is a process of gluing the full length of the lead to the wood casing of the pencil. This strengthens the lead and prevents breakage which allows for better sharpening, and produces a fine point. SV Bonding is a Faber-Castell trademark. " They're 45c more expensive per pencil than Prismacolors (1.74 vs 1.29 as of this writing) on dickblick.com for replenishment. But considering on average I've lost at least 5 5mm-long leads per pencil (yep: terrible!), that translates to something like a half inch or more lost. One pencil is 7 inches brand new and sharpened, ie almost 178mm. After breakage, you're paying $1.29 for 153 mm (or less than 158 depending on number of breaks), and you're losing 18c per pencil. Some are outright unusable and splinter. Polychromos are the same length. .009c vs .003c; less than a penny either way, but those pennies do definitely add up- and the bottom line even after doing the numbers for the heck of it is- that you're losing product and money every time a Prismacolor pencil busts or fails to perform. I'm totally not a penny pincher. I'm providing this as a breakdown moneywise for the innately curious. And people should NOT have to pay for items to break repeatedly. Prisma tried to address this issue by making pastel-like colored pencil sticks with no lead, as long rectangles- this didn't fix the issue as they're too unwieldy for detailed use; that's a side rant. PROS: -FC are not too much more expensive per pencil than Prismas (buy 10 of each; spend only $4.50 more for world-class quality) -Outstanding laydown -Oil vs wax-based: better blending -VIVID colors, yet not overwhelmingly bad -Traditional style naming conventions as a throwback to the formal pigmentation for artistic references -More realistic results (google up some of the prisma vs polychromos showdowns on Youtube- the video with the grapes painting is what I'm referencing here in particular) CONS: -Haven't seen any yet, will update this review if I do ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 2017 by Kitsune

  • These pencils are absolutely fantastic and one of the top tier colored pencils out ...
Size: 120 Count (Pack of 1)
It's tough to say anything new about these that hasn't already been said. These pencils are absolutely fantastic and one of the top tier colored pencils out there. I've used lots of different pencil types, including Prismacolor, Derwent, and Caran D'ache. These are absolutely at the top of the list and are some of the best pencils I have ever used. They're a little different than most brands though. These are oil based instead of wax based, which means that they'll feel a little harder than a pencil like Prismacolor, but don't suffer from breakage or wax bloom (where a cloudy, waxy film appears over the image when you have lots of layers). They also don't really smudge if you rub your fingers over part of the image, which is great. In terms of using them, they feel really smooth and glide over the paper quite nicely. They're extremely blendable and feel great in the hand. They sharpen really well and I've never once had a broken lead after sharpening. They even hold a sharp point a lot longer than many other brands, which helps with fine detail work. I also find that they erase reasonably well too, which I haven't had much luck with whilst using wax pencils. Granted, no colored pencil will erase perfectly, but these are much better if you need to remove some color. The only downside I can think of is the price. These are some expensive pencils, and so if you're not planning to use these a LOT, or just feel like playing around with colored pencil a bit, these are probably not worth the cost. But for everyone else, these are probably some of the best pencils money can buy. They're even available open stock in many art stores, so you can replace individual colors as needed. These rock! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2016 by Gregory R. Chernobrov

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