This year’s project for the Analogue Hobbies Painting Challenge marches straight into the deep snow of Northern Europe and the Winter War between the Soviet Union and Finland. The action took place, as the name suggests, in the winter of 1939–40. Once again, I’m painting the Russians, while Ray takes on the Finns. All of the figures for these first units are from Parkfield Miniatures, although later units may include specialist reinforcements drafted in from other ranges. One of the real joys of this period is that it gives us a second use for all the 28mm winter terrain we’ve already built for last year's project, Napoleons Retreat from Moscow.
Historically, the Winter War began in the uneasy aftermath of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, when Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union calmly agreed on who would menace whom. Stalin, peering nervously at maps, decided that Finland’s proximity to Leningrad was intolerable. The Finns were newly independent and understandably unimpressed by Soviet demands for territorial concessions. Diplomacy collapsed, and in November 1939, the Red Army rolled across the border in what Moscow insisted was a defensive measure, and everyone else recognised as an invasion.
What followed took place in some of the most brutal winter conditions ever endured by modern armies. Temperatures dropped to –30°C and below, turning weapons brittle, engines temperamental, and exposed skin into an invitation to frostbite. Soviet planners expected a swift victory, assuming that mass, armour, and artillery would quickly overwhelm a small, lightly equipped opponent. What they hadn’t factored in was Finland’s near-mythical familiarity with its own landscape. Forests, frozen lakes, and endless snow weren’t obstacles; they were tools. Finnish units moved on skis, vanished into tree lines, and struck where Soviet formations were weakest, turning the environment itself into a weapon.
The war’s narrative divides neatly into two acts: the Soviet disaster and the Soviet recovery. Early operations saw Red Army columns funnelled along narrow forest roads, where Finnish troops cut supply lines and isolated units using “motti” tactics, breaking larger formations into smaller, doomed pockets. The results were humiliating and costly. By early 1940, though, the Soviets adapted. Leadership improved, artillery was concentrated, and sheer industrial weight was brought to bear against the Mannerheim Line. Finland fought with extraordinary determination, but numbers and firepower eventually told. The Moscow Peace Treaty ended the war in March 1940, forcing Finland to give up territory while retaining its independence, a bitter compromise, but one that stunned the world.
The contrast between the two armies is part of what makes the Winter War so compelling, both historically and on the tabletop. The Soviet Union had vast resources but suffered from rigid doctrine, poor preparation, and an officer corps hollowed out by purges. Finnish forces were outnumbered, under-equipped, and often improvising (this is, after all, the conflict that popularised the Molotov cocktail), but they had experience, initiative, and morale in abundance. They were defending their homes, their freedom, and a way of life.
As you would expect, my soviet forces consist of a lot of infantry. I have started with a Platoon HQ unit and two light machine gun squads. I have several more primed and waiting in the wings, along with some support weapons and armour.
27x28mm Foot = 135 points2x28mm prone = 5 Points
Total = 140 Points











Fabulous work, Lee! One of those days I hope to give that conflict some attention too, till then I‘ll happily follow your progress
ReplyDeleteThank you
DeleteMarvelous work on these troops. I imagine Soviet morale was very low as the fighting continued, I can't even imagine what -30 degrees feels like.
ReplyDeleteIn any other century, campaigning in winter would be seen as madness. When temperatures plummet that low, it's hard to imagine how anyone could function effectively, let alone fight.
DeleteGreat work as always Lee. Way to get your money's worth out of the terrain collection!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant frosty work, and very satisfying to get multi-use terrain.
ReplyDeleteNice to see Parkfield getting some love
ReplyDeleteIt's a nice range with plenty of options.
DeleteI think you and Ray might get frostbite from painting back to back winter projects. Chilling good stuff!
ReplyDeleteNext year, something Tropical?
DeleteThey look properly chilly, nice work mate.
ReplyDeleteGreat entry Lee, clever idea to use last year's terrain as well - given it was clever I assume it was your, not Ray's idea :-)
ReplyDeleteLol. It was a joint choice, but it was Ray that suggested it as an option.
DeleteVery nice work Lee. As Curt notes, the rhyme with current events is difficult to miss...looking forward to seeing this project roll out! And great to see you both finding a way to further "amortize" your previous winter terrain investments.
ReplyDeleteIndeed. Yet another 'special military operation' that ended up necessitating a sledgehammer to crack a nut. Quantity has a quality all of its own as they say...but the cost in men and material was far out of proportion to what they expected when the war kicked off.
DeleteNice work! I can feel the temperature dropping as I look at them.
ReplyDeleteNice work on these. You can never have too many Russian infantry in your collection. As opposed to in your country. Then it's bad. Looking forward to seeing the rest of what you two come up with.
ReplyDeleteNice double use of terrain, but really nice looking Finns. Too bad about your gaming partner though…
ReplyDeleteWell Rayleigh of Essex this is an excellent choice teaching that there is nothing new under the sun. I really like these uneven struggles while early war kit and clothing I think is more interesting when people were theorising off of the inter war events. I also like the figures and have seen Parkfield at Partizan when I am in the south - they do some nice figures. Thanks Lee
ReplyDeleteExcellent work Lee. Your partner projects are great fun to follow. Living in the north with similar temperatures amazes one that fighting could even happen. Well done.
ReplyDeleteUsing up some more of that white powder mate 😆
ReplyDeleteVery nice figures indeed. Always had a hankering to do the Winter War after reading an article on it in one of the TFL Specials. Will be very interested to see how this one develops!
ReplyDeleteOooo very nice Ruskies, Lee. I look forward to pounding them into the snow!
ReplyDeleteThese look great. Remember quantity has a quality all its own :-)
ReplyDeleteVery nice Lee! The models look excellent, the practice with snow really shows off!
ReplyDeleteExcellent stuff for a fascinating piece of history! Can't believe I missed this until now. I must have been too stuffed on turkey.
ReplyDeletefantastic work on the infantry, Lee! They do look quite miserable, and remind me how miserable it is to play infantry in winter! ;)
ReplyDeleteIt is also great to see the Lee-Ray joint project 2.0 begin again!