After a few posts promising a unit of goblins as the next addition to my Orcs and Goblins army (and a few posts apologising for failing to deliver!) I’ve finally finished this large unit of Night Goblins!

With a cool 42 models in it it is one of the largest units I’ve ever painted, and took me quite a while to get through. With its rather sizeable footprint it was a bit awkward to photograph too, a lot like a large terrain piece.

I ended up batch painting the unit row by row (i.e. seven models at a time), except the shields and the basing which were done for the whole unit at once. Each row was relatively quick to do, but together this added up to a lot of work (Basing took me a whole evening!).
The banner was quite fun to paint, although I went in to it without a good idea of what to put on it. I decided a mushroom would be a good option given the Night Goblin moon was already represented at the top of the banner pole. I painted on a mushroom and then wasn’t sure where to go from there. I ended up taking a photo of the banner and doodling on the photo on my iPad to test out designs to add to my mushroom and I settled on what you see below. It was great to be able to experiment with designs without painting over and over again so I’ll do that again, a good lesson learned.

You might have noticed the shaman holding the green-headed staff on the right of the unit. This is one of the army’s characters, in fact the only wizard I have planned in there at the moment. This is a classic model that I picked up on eBay alongside the netters you see in the unit.

The night goblin models are the newly re-released plastics that were the standard kit back in 6th edition. There is a more modern night goblin box which is from the 7th edition era which is now marketed as an Age of Sigmar set. I really like the older plastics and I’d been looking for a second hand box when GW announced they were re-realeasing them. That made me and my wallet very happy, those second hand prices were getting sky high.

This new set came with a transfer sheet with a couple of designs for the shields. I loved the moon design on those transfers so that was an easy pick. I’ve never applied this many transfers in a single sitting!
I’m glad to see the end of this one, I’ve been painting it on and off for what must be a couple of months now (inter-spaced with a few other small projects such as the Fanatics I did a while back, which will be launched from this unit), and it took some determination (and a fair few hours) to get them finished this week. I love the look of these models as a massed unit and am chuffed with how they came out. I’m going to paint up a smaller scale project next I think!
Very nice, Nic, an impressive looking unit! 🙂 Good idea painting them by rows to make things more manageable. The mushroom banner looks really good!
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Thanks a lot John! There were a few process discoveries during painting this unit, I’ll need to apply it to the next ones!
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Excellent work on these, Nic! I love the mood of the first image where the goblins are silhouetted too!
I was a terrible painter back then and spent way less time on a single miniature back when I painted Warhammer Fantasy but I found getting huge blocks of troops like this to be a tall task even back then. I commend you for getting all of these done! One thing that I like about these sculpts is that they look like the rank up easily. That is such a big deal in Warhammer Fantasy and it can make getting a unit done much more enjoyable as well.
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Thanks Jeff! I had a bit of fun with that header!
I actually have very few painted armies from when I played a lot of Warhammer fantasy, I used to spend all my time playing games rather than painting armies, and most of my painting time was spent on competition pieces. It’s funny how that’s flipped these days, I barely play games and spend all my time painting!
These are quite easy to rank up due to the increase in base size that came with the old world, although these models are pretty compact so they probably would have been ok when when they were on the old sizes.
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That is quite a turnaround! It was such an undertaking to actually finish an army. I assume its the same way in The Old World but I know nothing about the game admittedly. I would say anybody who does build an army does so as a real labor of love.
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It’s about the same as before I’d say in terms of number of models etc. For me the nostalgia aspect of the hobby is most centered around seeing armies in white dwarf, hence my focus on painting armies and taking photos of them these days!
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Makes sense. There’s no doubt White Dwarf sold a lot of minis, especially for Warhammer because the images of all the units together on a battlefield is such an impressive sight!
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