Superwoman - Kristin Wells
I've had her in the works for quite some time. I started her and then either lost interest in customizing at the time or something went wrong or something else all together - I don't remember. Anyway, suffice it to say the old fires were stoked again and here she stands. From neck to knees she is a Power Girl. I smoothed out the peekaboo chest as best I could and filled in the rest. The lower legs are most likely from Raven. She's the most likely candidate because I probably had them lying around unused - hey, I had 3 cloaks so do the math
- and I had to fill in the heel part to get a solid foot. The head and cape come from a GA/SA Catwoman from Batman Legacy - she has been quite versatile in my quest to add to my DCUC collection(Sapphire too) - I took the cat ears off the head and painted the skull and hair. The "S" was a real bear. I couldn't hand paint it so I had to stencil it in 2 parts - The red background and then the yellow S trimming. I used an old Supergirl figure - black S variant - that I had scrubbed for parts to create the stencils. It took a few tries and it may not be perfect because masking tape is not exactly seethru but it can be managed with enough patience - which I nearly ran out of - but I got it up to passing, I think. I couldn't do the "S" on the cape as it not exactly conducive for stencil work, imo, and would not have been able to do the black line work if I had. I went with her for a number of reasons: 1) I wanted to round out my Superman shelf a bit more, like I have been doing with Wonder Woman. I look at the differences between the number of Batman and Batman related figures they did and the disparity is staggering. 2) Except for the "S" she was pretty simple to do - if any of you has a better way to handle things like this I'm always open for suggestions and eager to learn. 3) I figured she may not have been done before so would be a unique addition - of course I'm not up every custom that's ever been done and not every customizer is on this page but still. . .