Cemetery Pulp's Guided Globbings Workshop Provides Materials and Take-Home Miniature
Cemetery Pulp hosted Grey Gobbo's Guided Globbings, a teach-and-paint workshop where all materials were supplied and attendees took home a finished miniature.

Cemetery Pulp hosted Grey Gobbo's Guided Globbings: Miniature Painting on Saturday, January 24, bringing a hands-on, accessible workshop to the local painting community. The session lived up to its billing as a teach-and-paint class: the instructor provided minis and a full set of materials, guided painters through practical step-by-step techniques, and ensured every participant left with a painted miniature to show or game with.
The workshop format emphasized low barrier entry. Cemetery Pulp supplied brushes, paints, primers, and basing supplies so attendees did not need to bring a hobby kit. That mattered for beginners and for players who wanted to try a new tabletop look without investing in a full supply run. The session’s focus on demonstrating process from basecoat to finishing touches made it useful for painters at different experience levels who wanted concrete, repeatable steps they could replicate at home.
Grey Gobbo's Guided Globbings positioned itself as communal learning rather than a demo-only showcase. Instructors worked side-by-side with participants at painting stations, offering corrections, pacing advice, and practical shortcuts that cut through common stumbling blocks like brush control and color layering. The event’s hands-on approach created an immediate payoff: each attendee left with a completed miniature and a clearer sense of workflow for future projects.
Community impact was immediate. New painters gained confidence by finishing a take-home miniature, while intermediate painters picked up tips they could apply to commission work, club armies, or display pieces. For local game nights and club shows, the session also served as quick conversion therapy for collectors suffering from GAS; painters who had stalled on projects found momentum by finishing a piece in a single session.
Cemetery Pulp listed pricing and booking information on its events page before the workshop, making registration straightforward for those who wanted to secure a seat. The model, paid admission, materials included, finished-takeaway, is a repeatable template for other venues seeking to build their painting base and get new people painting at tables rather than just spectating online.
If you missed January 24, check Cemetery Pulp’s events page for future Grey Gobbo sessions or similar teach-and-paint nights. These kinds of workshops keep paint on brushes and minis on the board, and they make it easier to learn techniques and expand your collection without the upfront cost of a full hobby kit.
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