A miniature figure—also known as a miniature or just a mini—is a small figurine commonly used in role playing games (RPGs) such as Dungeons & Dragons. Though RPGs can be played without them, miniatures can help visualize where characters are during combat, such as which way each character is facing, who's fighting who, line of sight, etc. They are also used in tabletop wargames such as Heroclix, Mage Knight, and Warhammer. Some minis are superbly sculpted and are collectible in their own right.
The hobby of painting, collecting, and gaming with miniatures is descended from the toy soldier hobby. Traditionally, "toy soldiers" are sold pre-painted, and miniatures are sold "bare" and require painting. This distinction is blurring with the recent introduction of pre-painted plastic figures, such as those used in Clix games.
In 1993, the New York legislature nearly passed a bill outlawing lead in miniatures, citing public health concerns. Many miniatures manufacturers, anticipating that other states would follow with more bans, immediately began making miniatures with lead-free alloys, which often resulted in price increases (Bigalow 1993).
After nearly a year of debate (including protests by miniature manufacturers and enthusiasts), Governor Mario Cuomo signed a bill which exempted miniatures from the state's Public Health Law (N.Y. P.B.H. Law § 1376-a). Still, most American manufacturers continued to use non-lead alloys (Bigalow 1994).
Some manufacturers offer plastic (polyethylene or hard polystyrene) minis; others offer resin (mostly polyurethane) minis.
Mini scales are commonly expressed as the height of a six-foot (183 cm) figure. So 28 mm minis of human men are around 28 mm high. Women, children, dwarves, hobbits, etc. will be typically shorter than this; ogres, trolls, etc. taller.
Minis are available in various scales. 25 mm, 28 mm, 30 mm, and 35 mm are the most common for RPGs and other popular table-top games. Smaller minis – 10 mm, 15 mm, and sometimes 20 mm – are also made for table-top wargaming, rather than RPGs. Mithril Miniatures uses an idiosyncratic 32 mm scale for its main range. And larger minis – 54 mm and more – are made specifically for painters and collectors.
‘25 mm’ figures can range up to 33 mm or more (a 33% deviation). When some manufacturers began using a ‘28 mm’ designation, many of their own figures were already well over 30 mm tall.
Some manufacturers take the proper measurement of figure height to be to the level of its eyes rather than the top of its head. Using this interpretation, a 6 ft (1.83 m) figure in 28 mm-scale would be 30 mm tall (if the eyes are about half-way up the head, and if the head is about two fifteenths of the height, then the height to the eyes is fourteen fifteenths of the full height). Because of this 15 mm is for instance interpreted as 1:100 by some and 1:120 by others.
Another thing to complicate the matter of scales is the issue of body proportions. These differ from company to company. If you take a 30 mm figure from Games Workshop and compare it to a figure from Thunderbolt mountain you will see that the first has exaggerated proportions making it look much wider with bigger features like the head, hands and weapons.
| Scale | Scale foot | Ratio | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 mm | Useful for gaming in tight spaces | ||
| 6 mm | Growing in popularity | ||
| 10 mm | 1.667 mm | 1:182.88 | Growing in popularity |
| 15 mm | 2.5 mm | 1:121.92 | The most popular scale in use by historical wargamers playing in the Modern Period. Seldom used for RPGs. |
| 20 mm | 3.333 mm | 1:91.44 | Highly popular for WWII wargaming, as the figures are of the same scale (more or less) of 1:76 or 1:72 models (actually closer to 1:87 or 3.5 mm/ft which is HO model railroad scale). Seldom used for RPGs. |
| 25 mm | 4.167 mm | 1:73.152 | Effectively a match for 1:76 (4 mm scale/OO gauge) and 1:72 models, but there is a wide upwards variation in figure height, even when not described as 'Heroic 25 mm' or 28 mm. This is the most common size, as it is the size that Games Workshop uses. |
| 30 mm | 5 mm | 1:60.96 | Common for pre-1970s wargaming figures; modern minis may really be up to 35 mm. (Note: model railroad "S" scale is 1/64 which is close) |
| 32 mm | 5.333 mm | 1:57.15 | Idiosyncratic to Mithril: genuine 32 mm |
| 35 mm | 5.833 mm | 1:52.251 | Where the manufacturer is being honest about how big its '30 mm' minis really are! |
| 54 mm | 9 mm | 1:33.867 | Collectable figures, a good match for 1:35 models, but oversize 54 mm figures would fit better with 1:32 models. |
Although many gamers are indifferent to the quality of the paint job, for some the skillful painting of minis is a hobby in itself, on a par with the "more serious" modelling of historical and military figures. Skillful mini painting is a difficult, exacting, time-consuming process, but the results can be quite amazing.
Fantasy, role-playing, miniatures and wargaming conventions will sometimes feature miniature painting competitions, and there are many painting competitions on the internet.
Most metal and resin figures are made through centrifugal casting. Larger resin models, like buildings and vehicles, are sometimes gravity cast which is a slower process. For this process a sculptor will deliver a master figure which is then used to create rubber master and production moulds. The production moulds are then used to cast the actual figures you find in the stores.
Polyethylene and polystyrene figures are made through injection moulding. A machine heats plastic and injects it under high pressure into a steel mould. This is a very expensive process which is only interesting when you manufacture very large amounts of figures since the cost per cast is minimal.
Many miniatures companies do not do the actual production themselves but leave this to specialised casting companies or miniatures companies that do have a casting facility.
Miniatures companies with their own Wikipedia entries:
See the external links for other manufacturers and miniatures companies.
Masters for plastic miniatures are often made in a larger scale (like 3 times the required size). The master is measured with a probe linked to a pantograph which reduces the measurements to the correct size and drives the cutter that makes the moulds.
A more recent development is the use of digital 3D models made by computer artists. These models can be used to create a physical model for mouldmaking using rapid prototyping techniques or they can be used directly to drive a CNC machine which cuts the steel mould.
For more information on miniature sculpting you can check the 1listsculpting yahoo group which is specialised in this subject.
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