Baker 1 bakes 1,200 cookies in 6 hours, so she bakes 1,200/6 = <<1200/6=200>>200 cookies per hour.
Baker 2 bakes 250 cookies per hour.
Therefore, Baker 1 bakes fewer cookies per hour. Answer: \boxed{\text{Baker 1}}.
Baker 2 bakes 250 cookies per hour.
Therefore, Baker 1 bakes fewer cookies per hour. Answer: \boxed{\text{Baker 1}}.
Baker 1 bakes 1,200 cookies in a 6-hour period. Therefore, we can divide the total number of cookies by the number of hours to find out how many cookies Baker 1 bakes per hour.
Number of cookies baked per hour by Baker 1 = 1,200 cookies / 6 hours = 200 cookies/hour
Baker 2 bakes 250 cookies per hour.
Comparing the two, we can see that Baker 2 bakes fewer cookies per hour, as Baker 2 bakes 250 cookies per hour, whereas Baker 1 bakes 200 cookies per hour.
Baker 1 baked a total of 1,200 cookies in a 6-hour period. To find out how many cookies she bakes per hour, we divide the total number of cookies by the number of hours worked:
Number of cookies baked per hour by Baker 1 = Total number of cookies / Number of hours worked
Number of cookies baked per hour by Baker 1 = 1,200 cookies / 6 hours
Number of cookies baked per hour by Baker 1 = 200 cookies
So, Baker 1 bakes 200 cookies per hour.
On the other hand, Baker 2 bakes 250 cookies each hour.
Comparing the two, we see that Baker 1 bakes fewer cookies per hour than Baker 2.