With the bushing dies I use I have them down to .10 caliber, that is the beauty of a> bushing dies, you just swap out the bushing and away you go and b> owning the shop and resources to do that stuff on a whim.
I've used several bushing dies from other folks and for 95% of any work that needs to be done they fit the bill, for some projects though it has been easier and less expensive to just chuck up a blank in the lathe and cut what I wanted. I do have a bunch of .14 Bee and .17 Bee that I've made on both .32-20 and .25-20 cases (as well as .218 bee) Makes it handy for doing one of's as well when lots of changes are expected. IIRC the better set I have from a commercial source is from Shade Tree Engineering, he should have two sets available now, one for sizing from about .338 to .20 and one from about .30 to .50. Now the larger one has a 1 1/4" body so it will not fit most common presses, but any that have a bushing in there should be 1 1/4" back to 7/8" (if you just scratched your head, you don't have the right press for the larger set).
Side note here for those that don't know, the .32-20 and .25-20 (just a necked down .32-20 case) are survival cases from the days of blackpowder. Later in life the .25-20 got necked to .22 and became the .218 Bee. And of course all the wildcats that followed from there on that little case.
In the .25-20 I usually limit myself to the 100g or less bullets since that is what my various guns like, and more often than not more the 85g, 75g, and 60g bullets. Lots and lots of 4227 and now some with the Trail Boss powder with the cast bullets.