WestSide wrote:
Carrington wrote:
No question, it's all cumulative, and I should try to keep a cleaner and more child-free (lead-free) workspace. (He has learned that he can play with plastic miniatures but not metal)
When I first read this thread I remembered with fondness the ease of working with the higher quality (harder) lead figures.
After reading about kids and the dust I remembered the shear horror when I found one of my children by my bench after I just got done filing parting lines off a figure. I was pretty careful about things, but all it takes is one second of having your guard down. Nothing bad came of it, but we even ended up having his blood tested at a physical. But still, not cool at all.
This issue is also brings up memories of all the complaints when the industry went from lead to 'white metal'. Pretty much matched the drama the switch to resin is making.
I suppose lead once in awhile wouldn't be bad, maybe for the larger stuff (to save money). If it wasn't every mini you could contain it, but in general perhaps not so necessary after all.
Yeah... one interesting thing I'm learning as I go through the process of parenting -- other parents' recollection of parenting is often very hazy. And, now, as my son pushes 3 3/4, I'm beginning to realize my own recollection of the ones and twos is fading into haze.
It'd take a specific memory-jog to recollect some of my 'gut-wrenchers:' you're playing with.. .WHAT!!!?
There's an interesting literature now about stupid things every kid should do: lick a frozen fork... but not a frozen light pole, lick both contacts of a small battery, but not a car battery... fall down an scrape your knee on pavement... but not fall out of a window, touch a hot pot with the tip of your finger, but don't grab it.
Thinking about it that way, one of the biggest problems with lead and children is that there's no negative feed-back loop, unlike the frozen fork, the hot stove, or the 6v(?) battery contacts.