dashwood_one:
From the comic strip story 'Children Of The Revolution'. Also, Dalek Alpha (not red, but Daleks can change casings), can be found in the now lost Second Doctor story 'Evil Of The Daleks' (1967).
dashwood_one:
nb. You can't buy the 12th Doctor with this head sculpt - I had two spares from the 'Time Of The Doctor' sets (I bought three), and swapped them, as the sculpt that is being used, is, to be frank, bloody awful. The 'regeneration' head is a great sculpt of Peter Capaldi.
dashwood_one:
The Doctor's coat was donated by the 'X-Men' character, Rogue. Not a weird crossover, but I had an 'X-Men' movie action figure portraying Rogue wearing the black 'X-Men' uniform. It's a really nice figure, but the coat hid most of her, so it was consigned to my Action Figure Props box. Just for a laugh, I tried fitting it on a 12th Doctor figure - and it looked pretty good, so he has kept it.
dashwood_one:
Also, if you were wondering why I have three Ice Warriors, then the answer is simple - most classic Doctor Who will only ever have three monsters on screen at any one time. Daleks ranks were always bolstered with life size photographic cut outs, for example. But three was the magic number, early on. Notable exceptions were 'The Moonbase', and 'The Tomb Of The Cybermen'.
dashwood_one:
If they're made for children, why are they adult-sized, ie. full scale replicas? Also, the BBC used the toy sonics as props - generally because Matt Smith was always breaking the 'real' expensive, prop. Yes, really.
caraphernelia:
so cool ^^