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Saturday, June 6, 2026

Painting Seasonality

I have been bemoaning my lethargy at the painting desk since the arrival of spring.  Painting production has fallen off from the respectable start in the first three months of the year.  Looking back at earlier analysis on my own painting seasonality and routine, I began to consider that this recent perception may not be anything out of my normal cyclical efforts at the workbench.

Let's see what the data suggest.

Grabbing the data from the Painting Log and loading them into my favorite data analysis software, I set to work.  Long time readers may recall that painting results have been diligently tracked since late 1995.

First place to start, here, is a tally of painted figures in the first five months of 2026.  The figure below shows actual counts of figures painted by month.  Reaching 100 painted figures in one month is always a stretch goal for me.  Rarely happens but noteworthy when it does.  Notice that the very respectable (to me) output in March was followed by a less than stellar count in April.  This pattern happens regularly.  I reckon I experience some painting fatigue after a big month and then back off time spent at the table in the next.  
Actual Painted Figure Counts in 2026
Raw figure counts can distort actual effort, though.  To compensate for the mix of figures and figure sizes painted, the counts are adjusted by figure size.  To make this adjustment, I use The Analog Hobbies Painting Challenge Painting Points conversion.  The graph below shows these raw counts converted to Painting Points.  Notice how January and February surpass March's totals when factoring in figure size.  January and February must have seen more 28mm figures cross the table than did March.  April totals still look anemic no matter the scheme used to count.   
Adjusted Painted Figure Counts in 2026
Back to my initial question regarding painting cycles, seasonality, and whether this year is an anomaly or fits into standard operating procedure.  The graph below shows monthly totals in Painting Points from 1996-2025.  That's thirty years of data!  The solid line super-imposed on the bar graph denotes the trend for monthly painting points.  Notice that production has fallen off from the more productive years of 2010-2020.  "TOTPOINTS" are painting figure counts adjusted for Painting Points.
Monthly production and trend in Painting Points.
For seasonality tests, I use times series decompositions to separate the various components of the Painting Log time series.  I stick to examining adjusted figure counts which are adjusted by Painting Points.  I skip over the intermediate steps to series decomposition but provide a graphic showing these seasonal decompositions in the graphic below: 
Seasonal decompositions by Painting Points
A bunch of squiggles for the various components.  Can a seasonal component be found herein?
Seasonal Painting Tendencies 1996-2025
Looking at the seasonal painting tendencies graph, above, my painting does exhibit some seasonal tendencies.  The decomposition suggests a clear yearly seasonal pattern in figure-painting output with the strongest positive seasonality in late fall and early winter and weaker output in spring and early summer.  In other words, my painting productivity appears to rise and fall in a repeating annual cycle rather than moving randomly.

This seasonality looks like a low-in-summer, high-in-winter painting pattern.  One plausible explanation is that I finish more figures in the colder months.  
Since I live in the northern hemisphere, indoor hobby time increases in colder months and competing outdoor activities decrease.  The late-year surge is strong enough that it is unlikely to be a small random fluctuation.

What does the graphic suggest for each month's output?
  • January.  Slightly above the average (Monthly Mean).  A decent start to the year, but not a major peak.
  • February.  Still a little above average.  Productivity holds up before the spring dip.
  • March.  Clear drop below average.  The beginning of the low-output season.
  • April.  Still below average, but not as weak as March.  A partial recovery, not a full rebound.
  • May.  Another dip below average. This is one of the quieter months in the cycle.
  • June.  Less negative than March, April, and May.  Productivity improves a bit, but it is still not strong.
  • July. Another weak month.  Summer still looks like a trough for figure painting.
  • August.  Back above average.  This is the first noticeable turn upward after the summer slump.
  • September.  Falls below average again.  The recovery is not smooth yet.
  • October. Strongly above average.  This looks like the beginning of the peak season.
  • November.  Very strong output.  The seasonal upswing continues.
  • December.  Highest point of the year.  This is the clearest peak in the cycle.
While my 2026 painting output follows a similar trend to the seasonality study, May 2026 was up as opposed to down from April.  May only outpaced April this year due to a very last-minute push to get some figures across the painting table before month's end.  So far, the seasonal pattern appears mostly intact for 2026.  Now, June may see a different turn, however, since painting time may be at a premium.

The seasonality offers a strong enough pattern that these data could be useful in planning hobby goals. How so?  If planning painting goals around this annual cycle, aim for the biggest output in late fall and winter.  Treat spring and summer as lower-intensity months for smaller projects or preparation.

Perhaps I am not such a slacker but a prisoner of my own tendencies?

64 comments:

  1. Interesting analysis. I track my own output, but just for a yearly total. I know my painting goes in cycles, normally between 80 and 150 figures in a month. The 80 figure months are my 'down' cycle, though this year started badly with an alarming slump lasting 3 months

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    1. Neil, you are a painting machine! To what do you attribute your three-month painting slump this year?

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    2. I think it was burn out after a couple of very productive years and a lack of new project, remedied now with the Punic Wars

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  2. An interesting read Jon, I can see the seasonality as being an important factor, weather, other hobbies etc. so useful for planning a project.

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    1. Knowing your painting tendencies can be useful in project planning and execution.

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  3. I tend to trundle along without big changes due to season,except for March which is always low because my wife and daughters birthday fall in that month and free time is limited, even after finishing the painting challenge I pretty much continue, I don't have competing activities as garden work is done at the weekend and I dont tend to paint then, your painting drop seems to coincide with your increase in gaming?
    Best Iain

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    1. Iain, you make a good observation.! My general decrease in painting from 2020 did coincide with a general (and marked) increase in gaming.

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  4. The season definitely affects my output from very slow to glacial. The nice weather arrives and trips out and the garden calls. When I had a permanent painting desk I used to grab 10 mins here and there. But having to always set up on the dining table sucks that time away. Not a complaint, just the way it is. Luckily, painting isn't the major hobby activity attraction it once was.

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    1. Richard, you under-estimate your painting efforts! This year, I have seen a number of units march out from your painting desk in a steady parade. Not having a permanent painting area does affect one's painting production. I agree that once gameable armies are mustered across multiple periods, the urge to paint decreases.

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  5. Jon, one element more than any other affects my output; holidays. Mrs f insists on at least one big (2 week + holiday) a year and if it isn't in the UK that's that as far as painting goes. On the flip side breaks such as Christmas and, a bit less, bank Holidays can push the average up. December is always a big month, not least because i might be making a big push to get the year total up from mediocre to so-so. One other thing, has deteriorating eyesight 😢 led to a bias towards larger scales? Andrew

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    1. Thanks, Andrew! Good to see you back! As seen above, December is a big month for me as well. While my eyesight is not what it used to be, I still maintain a balanced mix between 15mm and 25mm figure painting. The smaller figures are getting more difficult to see, though.

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  6. Jonathan, interesting analysis. There are three factors that influence my painting and motivation. Work. Holidays always see a huge increase in productivity. I don't think it needs much explanation - more free time.
    Secondly, I need natural light to paint. I've tried daylight lamps etc but find I paint better in natural light which means a reasonably sunny day.
    A quick look at my blog suggests Spring and Autumn (Fall) are the seasons I'm most productive. Oddly Summer often sees things stall. In the UK our Summers are becoming unseasonably hot, too hot in fact. That or they are wet and cloudy. Winter has shorter days, so less natural light. Were Summer a little less warm, I suspect I'd produce more.
    Neil

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    1. Thanks, Neil! I think i only painted under natural light when I first began painting figures more than 50 years ago. Since my painting station has been in a basement for the last 30 years, artificial light is needed. As the years pass, a brighter light is needed more frequently. Summers are hot here, but I work in the basement where it is naturally cooler and AC is readily available. Will your painting increase when retirement comes into the frame? We will see!

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  7. I know I'm a seasonal painter by and large, with certainly a tendancy towards more painting in the Autumn and Winter, with drop offs in the other months. In large part this is due to the longer days and generally improving weather in Spring, which leads to lots of time in the garden, which feels great after being stuck indoors over Winter. Then as Summer ebbs I've had enough of gardening and look forward to getting back to more hobby related stuff. So I know this is my pattern, so I no longer worry about it and just go with the flow. I do know having a dedicated games room and the ability to leave my painting station set up has led to more painting than before. It is afterall a hobby so I paint when the Muse is upon me, as I want to enjoy it and it not to feel a chore.

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    1. Thanks, Steve! Very happy for you that you have a permanent place for both gaming and painting. Your painting pattern seems to mirror my own. Only rarely do I feel like painting is a chore. There are times, though, when the muse leaves me as well. My painting energy is the highest during the cold winter months as these graphs illustrate.

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  8. Well, although it is a common trope to suggest that there is no such thing as "enough" perhaps there could be something behind the accumulation of figures over time given your steady (and high volume) production over the years. In other words, perhaps actual demand (or lessening thereof) may influence production rates?

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    1. Ed. when is enough, enough is a classic question. While I may not have reached that point yet, I am likely close. Well, unless I begin a new project!

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  9. Data notwithstanding, the photograph at the top of this post is great! Always very interesting (and fun) to see fellow hobbyists at work in their hobby space.

    Kind Saturday Regards,

    Stokes

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    1. Sorry to disappoint but that is not me in the lead photo! Good to see a comment from you, Stokes!

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  10. As impressive as the work output is the long-term commitment to measuring it! Wow! I have no idea off the top of my head if my painting output is seasonal. I'd have to check through my blog to find out. One thing for sure is that it is highly sporadic with short bursts of intense activity. More construction than FMCG.

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    1. Thanks, Chris! I guess if you want to know the answer to this question, you ought to start tracking your output.

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  11. Interesting I tend to have a slow Jan, pretty good Feb and March, then runout of steam in May, pick up until too hot in June normally then July can be hot and miss August is better then falls off until September, October and November good, December’s a write off almost

    Cheers
    Matt

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    1. Thanks, Matt! Similar but not necessarily the same seasonal tendencies that I exhibit.

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  12. I am like Chris above but my gut feeling is that my painting isn't seasonal but rather driven by enthusiasm for projects and recently acquired figures.
    Unlike many(most), I generally buy stuff and paint it, then buy more and paint that etc, so I don't have a huge collection of unpainted, half completed projects (although in the last few years, there has been a very slight tendency in that direction)

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    1. Could your non-seasonality be related to your moderate climate? Not having a Lead Pile and painting as fast as the goods come in? Say it isn't so!

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    2. Could be, Jon. I always use an angle poise lamp, so daylight isn't important to me. Most painting probably happens between approximately 7 to 10pm although at the weekend or on holidays, it can happen during the day as well.
      I do now have a small accumulation of stuff I have bought and not painted yet, but I don't think it's enough to call a pile or mountain....or perhaps I am just in denial?!

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    3. Well, if you paint mainly at night, no need to seek natural light and painting can be had year-round. One day, we should share our Lead Piles for comparison. Maybe not...

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  13. If we were just painters, then I think measurement would matter more, but the painting for many of us is but a slice of the overall wargaming activity - as long as we feel that our hobby is generally alive and well, then the painting happens when the painting happens.

    I now think I need to be under some pressure / need to paint for a specific project, if I am to paint to any sustained level …. Otherwise it is easily displaced by another bit of wargaming activity, whatever that might be.

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    1. Norm, we cannot manage what isn't measured. Besides, I reckon many of us are still painters first and gamers second as a number of blogs and GWS results suggest. You are right, though, in that we shouldn't pressure ourselves to produce when wargaming has so many other interesting facets. Pursue what inspires at the time.

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  14. Seasonality is definitely a factor for me with Spring and Autumn being the most productive. The sun comes up here at 4:00am in summer so it is quite easy to rise early and put three to four hours in before work, and much harder to get up at that time in the dark in winter especially as very few bother with heating here in the sub-tropics.

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    1. Thanks, Lawrence! Getting three to four hours of painting in every day before work helps to explain your fantastic productivity. Well done!

      Interesting that winter is not as favorable to your painting schedule as is it here in the northern hemisphere. Up north, if we didn't have heat we would all freeze solid in the long, cold winters!

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  15. Well you certainly paint a lot each year Jonathan so I think you can relax a bit regarding how it is spread out over the year 😁

    Still it is good to get a sense of your usual monthly productivity if only to put any fears to rest.

    Could your decline in September be caused by your preparation work for the winter months? I know you have mentioned doing this a few times.

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    1. Thanks, Ben! The September dip is an interesting phenomenon. The September dip could be a brief lull between August’s painting spike and the fall/winter painting campaign. September typically sees my largest Riyadh of miles out on the bike. Maybe I am simply exhausted?

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  16. Well I could say I paint more than you as I generally get about 100-120 figures done EXCEPT that's for the year not the month! I've been surprised that my output is not significantly up since retirement.
    One seasonal factor is that while my wife has generously given me the biggest of the rooms upstairs for the hobby, it's also the hottest room as it gets the most afternoon sun which is not great for painting.
    The other factor may be that I am getting in more games and so a 'season of games' can reduce the time painting and vice versa. This year for the first time I have a project I want to complete in 12 months so the focus is mainly on painting. Maybe I'll get there or maybe butterflies will leap in.
    However as has been pointed out the hobby is for enjoying not for beating ourselves up about results.
    Have fun everyone
    Stephen

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    1. Appreciate your thoughtful insights, Stephen! Increased gaming certainly takes away time at the gaming table for me too. What is your new project?

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  17. I think you need a hobby… Seriously, ‘seasonal interests’ are not new to me, although actually achieving anything is based on other factors. Late summer/early autumn is ACW, early summer and Christmas is Western Desert, later autumn Napoleonic, etc. It’s generally fixed when something significant happened so heavily linked to nostalgia.

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  18. My painting these days is extremely variable as I don't have many 'big projects' these, just bits and pieces.

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    1. Thanks, Martin! With as many games as you play and write-up, I am surprised there remains any time for painting.

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  19. Jonathan, your post had me digging back through some of my stats. Most years are steady with a monthly variance of 10-20%, but there is no real evidence of seasonal influence. Since I don't maintain a large lead pile (I'm more a 'just in time' sort of guy...probably stems from my days as a product manager), my variables tend to be dependant on supply or whether I am travelling in a given month. Of course the last couple of years, with a deliberate slow down, the variances have been extreme.

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    1. Thanks, Mark! You and Keith are both just-in-time stockists without any seasonal painting tendencies. Have you influenced each other or is this a cultural trait?

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    2. We are both Scottish so probably just too mean to have $1000's of worth of figures lying around the place!

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    3. Well I am only one quarter Scottish, but I have always worked to a plan and always go back to the days when I first started work and my boss drilled it into me "...stock turns, lad, that us the key...keep the stock turns high..."

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    4. I have some Scottish ancestry too, but I hold a HUGE Lead Pile!

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  20. Looking back through my painting logs for the past few years it seems I am inconsistent in my painting for most months. The only the only months that show any consistency are July and August where I have not painted anything in seven years I looked at.

    I would say this is due to work being busy, more outside activities and vacations. June and September also show years with zero painting but not as frequently as the other two.

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    1. Thanks, Dan! Never painting in July and August over the years is consistency, for sure! How long have you been tracking your painting productivity?

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    2. I've been tracking since 2015. The first years were a bit erratic. I did notice as I looked at some more years that in 2021 I painted in July and August.
      Warring States Chinese and Vietnam War. Both projects I was trying to get finished as we started back into face to face gaming.

      Now I'll need to add a sheet to my painting document tracking the months over the the years.

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  21. There's a Journal of Psychology paper in this Jon!!

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  22. I'm much more consistent.......consistently slow that is. My output is hard for me to gage because I can go for periods of painting, but not posting my results which makes it more difficult to tell my most productive times. I think factors like weather, time, mood, upcoming games all play a roll.

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    1. Thanks, Christopher! Consistently slow has a consistently of its own.

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  23. I can't argue with anything that everyone has said. I don't think I have trends? I only track the painting Challenge, where I get most of my painting done for the year. From March onwards I still paint but at a slower rate, it all depends if I've got figures left over undercoated. O don't usually get a lot dobe over weekends, that's normally for a game with the Rejects or days out with family and friends or the dreaded word Decorating. Which I spent the whole of last weekend doing! Booooo!

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    1. Ray, I am sure your seasonality would come to the fore with your huge efforts during the winter months of the Painting Challenge.

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  24. Although I keep a record of figures painted I also record vehicles and terrain pieces. I compare yearly totals but not the months, I have always assumed I paint more in the autumn/winter months because I have less distractions. Perhaps I should do a month by month comparison to see if it is the case?

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    1. Anon, I would enjoy seeing the results from your monthly painting totals.

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  25. I didn't knew that I need your posting. I have the impression that as a gamer without large gaming events, my output is very much connected with other events (concerts, reenactment) and trips. I do like your photo with the book. I'm very often using paintings (as they are no problems for my periods) and since 2 or 3 weeks photos of other reenactors.

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    1. Thanks for your perspective, André! Having a gaming event on the horizon is a definite motivator to get figure painted.

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  26. Sometimes I do marvel at your attention to the statistics and numbers Jon. I’ve certainly reduced my painting in the last month or so as I just been too busy. My suggestion dont worry about the goals and paint when you feel like it 👍

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  27. Interesting stuff, as ever - I bow to your obsessive record-keeping! Are we painters first or gamers? I do slightly worry that I've done some painting/basing in recent months but precious little actual gaming with the figures already painted. Oh, and on the seasonal thing - I may buck the trend, because I quite enjoy sitting in the garden (in the shade) in summer and painting some figures!

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    1. Thanks, David! Yeah, perhaps s bit obsessive but since track painting anyway, might as well report on the efforts. I don’t think I’ve ever painted al fresco.

      I need to return to a game on my table as well.

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