Most of the commercial 1:20 figures are about $10 or more, EACH.
It might be time to break out the Sculpey - you can get a lot of figures out of $1 worth.
Here's a couple of seated 1:20 ones I made from Sculpey.
This ebay seller is very cheap--I've bought a good many figures at 1:30 to pass for 1:29 and they are not bad at all. They may be too small though
http://stores.ebay.com/everydaygoodz_Model-Figures-People_G-Scale-Figures-People_W0QQcolZ4QQdirZ1QQfsubZ18538045QQftidZ2QQtZkm
This brings up an interesting point I've been knocking around. As a model railroader I look at thing in scale, 1:29 in my case. As an artist I paint things in perspective. In other words if things are closer to the viewer than my trains than they should be larger (scale) and further away smaller (scale). It would seem a vehicle in 1:24 could be in front of my train while a 1:32 vehicle could be behind it.
Then there is the different sizes of people. My grandmother was under five foot tall. My son is six-six, that's over 18". It seems poeple of different sizes could be mixed together.
Comments
Rob
Forced perspective works very well in situations where the scene is viewed from a single view point. That's a very rare circumstance in the garden. It could work in very specific circumstances, but it's hard to effectively pull off.
As for people, they do come in all shapes and sizes, but there's still somewhat of a limit as to how much you can mix smaller figures with larger ones. While height vary greatly, physical features (head size, foot size, chest size) aren't proportional to height. As such, a 1:24 figure may not always "work" as a short 1:20 figure.
Later,
K
Jerry
web site:
http://thescrr.com/
Get the Garden Railways newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month