Dolls-who's-who
Dolls-who's-who
For newbies who have no clue - just as I was for a long time and still am in some aspects! - I want to explain here who it is you can meet in the galleries. For each larger doll series in my collection I wrote a - hopefully informative and entertaining - article and I collected in the smaller series in a mixed article. I did some research as best as I could to find some correct dates and other informations and each article also somes with my thoughts on and plans for each kind of doll.
Once Upon a Zombie is a small collection of only six dolls produced by Wow Wee, whom I never heard of before and on whose website I couldn't find any information if they plan to add more dolls to this toy line.
A Google search turned up that they produce all kind of things, from roy robots up to technical gadgets. Currently the zombies are their only dolls with real hair and of this size.
So I was very curious when I ordered Cinderella. In Wow Wee's official webshop these dolls cost 20$ and they can be bought for less than 30 Euro on the German Amazon Marketplace. Since Amazon doesn't sell them themselves I figure this series either never came out officially in Germany or they were gone again right away. According to the packaging Cinderella is from 2012 and they are listen on Amazon Germany since 2013.
As the name implies the doll of Once Upon a Zombie are... well, zombies!
Zombified versions of classical faerietale princesses, to be precise. There's Cinderella, Snow White, Rapunzel, Sleeping Beauty, Belle and the Little Mermaid. I own Cinderella, Rapunzel and the little Mermaid.
The dolls are roughly 29cm tall and thus about half a head taller than a Monster High doll. I draw this comparison first away since the Once Upon a Zombie dolls are more than a little "inspired" by Monster High. Their joints are made in exactly the same way and they have movable wrists, ellbows, shoulders, knees, thighs and head. Like Monster High the dolls can only turn their head decently sidewards and up, which is espescially sad for a zombie. The shape of the head is very similar to the highschool ghouls. The hands can be removed so they too can easier slip into and out of tight fashion. The hip joint is constructed the same too.
There are some differences, though. E.g. the torso of a Once Upon a Zombie doll is more massive to make the princesses look grown up.
To end the comparisons with Monster High I want to state that the zombie princesses can easily wear Monster High shoes, although the angle of their feet are not the same and thus they lean forward somewhat when they do so. That isn't obvious on photos taken in a seating position and when they stand up you have to use some tricks. Since the zombies come barefeeted that's a good thing, anyway. That means shoes of Ever After High dolls should fit without problems too. I haven't tested yet if they might fit into some of their clothes too, but I know for sure they don't fit into Monster High fashion. One I find some time to make size tables for sewing patterns I'll definitely test stuff for the zombies too.
The main point of sale for me are the "glass" eyes of the zombies. They have shiny, pretty eyes and real lashes. Sadly the lashes were inserted directly into the eyeball so if you look at them directly up front you can see some white of the eyeball above them. Still, real lashes are something luxurious. The eyes themselves are surely not really made of glass but of acryl. Very sophisticated fans might say they look a bit pixelated. I think they're pretty although they are not totally up to par with the super-nice glass eyes of Bratzillas.
Another plus factor is the clothes. Those are sewn quite carefully. All seams are well made, the outfit isn't two sizes too small and even the little gemstone on the front of Cinderella's dress is sewn on and not just glued on. There are some not-so-great seams on the tulle part of Rapunzel's dress but it actually emphasises her zombie look.
Sadly there are drawbacks too.
The dolls have quite a lot of hair but it's not of very good quality and starts to kink after just a bit of brushing.
Cinderella has some stains in the plastic spread all over her body (e.g. a black spot on her cheek, a line across her shoulder and a black blotch at the back of her leg. The make-up also has some defects. Her lipstick is a bit lumpy. Rapunzel's lipstick is a bit misprinted, apart from that she's okay.
The hands are made of a softer plastic, just like those of Monster High. Sadly, sadly - and that's the biggest downer - the shanks and knee joints are made of that soft plastic too. Her ankles are also thinner than the doll's arms, they are actually the thinnest part of her. That makes them stand very badly and gives them a strong tendency to bend backwards in the knees or to bend out of shape.
The ellbow and hand joints have a lot of leeway and sometimes move unintentionally.
At first, one of the legs didn't move at all. The hip made squeaky noises that sounded very worrysome. After some careful prodding the resistance was gone and now it moves, after all. At least the plastic doesn't smell, so the quality isn't quite as cheap as one might fear.
Overview of plus and minus:
+ acrylic eyes with true lashes
+ well-made clothes
+ fresh theme
+ dolls come with dollstand and brush
~ bodies may be stained
~ no shoes
- shanks and knees made of soft plastic which makes them hard to pose standing
- hair is of mediocre quality
A detail specifically pertaining to my Cinderella is that she was delivered with a damaged hand. It seems that the joint melted together with the hand and that it either ripped by pressure or that someone tried to repair it with a knife. (Not the shop, the doll came in its original sealed package.) As a result most of the joint clings to the hand instead of the wrist and the hand is stiff. When I asked the shop (Toysafari_Deutschland on the Amazon Marketplace) they said they never had a customer complaint about these dolls. So I hope this is rather rare. (And yes, I was compensated for it.)
My opinion on Once Upon a Zombie:
I love the idea behind this.
It's somewhat the missing link between Monster High and Ever After High, a theme that in my opinion is quite clever and new. At first sight I thought the clothes were a parody of the Disney Princesses but at second sight only Rapunzel and Snow White have a resemblance to those. Even that they're essentially Monster High clones would not have bothered me if the quality of the bodies was a bit better. The eyes are so pretty and they are exactly what I wanted to try with a Monster High custom all the time.
I primarily wanted these dolls for Dolltopia to replace the zombies of the Living Dead Dolls which in comparison to the other dolls always look very bulky and can barely move. Monster High dolls don't seem very suitable for this since they have strongly premade characters which I could hardly change without alienating their fans. So undead faerietale princesses seemed just perfect!
Now I have the problem though that these dolls stand very badly thanks to their soft lower legs. I'm also not sure if the thin ankles or the pins which connect the knee to the thigh won't warp with strain. Only time will tell.
There's definitely not collector's passion coming up here. There are only six dolls anyway and only three of them I like well enough to buy them despite the negative points.
Of course the zombies are in the gallery too if you want to see more of them. And as mentioned they'll sometimes co-star in Dolltopia too.
Ever After High
The Ever After High dolls were first available in Germany by the end of 2013. It is a spin-off - or rather a sister - to Monster High. Both series are connected by C.A. Cupid who transferred from Monster High to Ever After High (and in the process graphically exchanged her bone wings for golden angel wings).
The Ever After High is visited by the decendants of famous fairytale characters. So we meet Apple White, the daughter of Snow White, for instance, or Briar Beauty who is the daughter of Sleeping Beauty. Contrary to Monster High the Ever After High is a boarding school where the pupils live.
Still, they seem to enjoy some degree of freedom, e.g. Ashlynn Ella (daughter of Cinderella) runs a shoe shop in her free time.
Schoolmaster Grimm prepares the pupils for the most important day in their lives: Destiny Day.
On this day everyone ceremonially vows to follow their fairytale legend and accept their fate to relive their fairytale.
If they refuse, so they say, their fairytale will end, vanish from the books and in the worst case the pupil in case will vanish into nothingness too.
However, the other brother Grimm who is confined to the hidden library and can only talk in riddles tells the desparate Raven Queen (daughter of the Evil Queen from Snow White) that she can choose to shape her own destiny too. Raven Queen who in no way wants to become an Evil Queen but a helpful, nice person in turn refuses to take her vow on Destiny Day, turning it into a horrible day especially for Apple White who now has to fear for her own Happily Ever After.
The pupils now devide into two groups: The Royals and the Rebels. The Royals are for the most part princesses who can look forward to their fate with joy while the Rebels are pupils who wish for a different destiny for themselves. These include totally different characters. Besides Raven Queen the Rebels include e.g. Madeline Hatter, daughter of the Mad Hatter, who just thinks this is too funny and who wants to help her friend Raven, and there's also Hunter Huntsman, son of the Hunter, who can't accept that his relationship to Ashlynn Ella is forbidden because she's destined to marry a prince and he's just a simple hunter.
Now for the dolls themselves.
Ever After High dolls have the same height as Monster High. Still, the clothes can only be mixed in very limited ways because they differ in body proportions. The Ever Afters are more massive overall, with wider hips, a fuller waiste and slightly thicker legs. I like this very much because it makes them look more grown up and normal. Monster High dolls can wear some Ever After clothes but they fit very loosely. The other way around is almost impossible, as Monster High clothes are too small. This doesn't go for shoes though. Of five tested pairs of Monster High shoes Apple White was able to wear three pairs. So it's a bit of a lucky dip but it's worth to test your MH shoes on your Ever Afters.
Ever After High also comes with dolls of different sizes already. Madeline Hatter is way smaller than her friends. Whether this reflects on her clothes size too I haven't tested yet but I can imagine that like for Monster High her feet might be a bit smaller. With Hunter Huntsman the first male was published too and he turned out very good. There are also variations in skintone, although not as extreme as in Monster High, of course.
Mattel took a giant step back when it comes to the heads though. While Monster High dolls all have individually shaped heads all Ever Afters so far have the same head. This is very sad, especially since the heads are - in my opinion, veeeeery round and flat. They all look a bit like they ran into a wall with their moon faces. With their very wide heads they look to me like a cross between a Monster High and a Pullip, as if they wanted to give them oversized heads but then didn't quite pull it off.
As for the outfits, those are very creative so far. The fairytale in question reflects fine in the outfits and accessoires but is always modernized and trendy. The dolls come with many small accessoires like rings, earrings and bracelets. Especially the rings easily get lost so I'd recommend to leave the little rubber band on that they are packaged with.
There is a certain... creative freedom, though. I still wonder why Apple White has blonde hair when she is the next Snow White. Her hair should be black as ebony, as we all know. I suppose they wanted a stark contrast to Raven Queen but the way it is Apple always reminds me of Goldie Locks (who with her screaming yellow hair would surely gladly have taken Apple White hair colour).
So far each doll comes with a doll stand in a matching colour. The base is shaped like the logo of Ever After High. The doll stands are hidden within the box and are sometimes overlooked. Keep in mind though that Mattel eventually stopped giving each Monster High doll a stand and that all stands (and brushes) are black these days. A similar development will surely happen to Ever After one day too.
The first series contained the most important characters, with the man only being sold in a set with his girlfriend. The second series repeated some characters in their Destiny Day outfits. From then on Mattel kept pumping out new series and expansions and just like with Monster High you have to decide one day which dolls to buy and which ones to skip unless you're a millionaire. There are also several sets of furniture and/or locations, some of which are sold with a special doll. There are no fashion sets yet. Since Mattel didn't publish any for Monster High either for the past few years they probably decided that those don't reek in enough money and so they stopped making them.
My opinion on Ever After High:
Ever since I bought Raven Queen Monster High was as good as dead for me. I enjoy Ever After High much better. For once, I love princesses and fairytale characters, and furthermore I like the boarding school much better and also the story with the Royals and Rebels and e.g. Apple White trying to get Raven Queen back on her destined track. The little diaries tell much more exciting stories that also fit better together than those of Monster High.
Sadly it's not all gold that glitters, not even here. Since I own six or seven of some Monster High characters I took a vow to be very, very critical of all new Ever After products and to only buy duplicate characters when their outfit literally knocks me out of my socks. Contrary to the cute product shots the Destiny Day Apple White was a disappointment with her shower curtain cape and the wobbly plastic jewelery. By now I also own the Destiny Day Briar Beauty and I'm shocked at how bad her face is. (Smeared mascara, misprinted lipstick, carved lines in her face as if someone punched her while she wore glasses.)
Furthermore I really don't like the shape of the faces much and I hope that Mattel will rethink this and publish some dolls with new head shapes because else I'll be even more critical with my buys. That Cherise Hood comes without her wolf ears is a pet peeve of mine.Since (luckily?) there are lots of outfits and/or patterns that I disliks I'm able to skip many dolls. I do like almost all furniture sets so far, however. Tipp: If you buy the shoe shop set you can get a few extra shoes, at least.
In any case, I will sew for Ever After High too and especially for these dolls my fingers are itching to replace their plastic jewelery with beaded or otherwise higher grade accessoires.
Re-ment
In Japan artifical food is very popular, especially as decoration in restaurants and shop windows. So the Japanese company Re-ment (short for ""Reform Entertainment") had the idea to sell series of miniature items and food that target adult collectors.
For the most part Re-ment is sold in small boxes which contain a random set. Series with less parts (but often a higher number of sets) are sometimes sold in blind bags instead. Sometimes they also offer things like furniture or shop counters separately without the random effect.
There are new series all the time which typically consist of 6-12 individual sets per series. Everything is produced in limited amounts and series often sell out very fast. A covering box with an intact seal contains a complete series so serious collectors don't have to deal with duplicates and trading. From time to time there are said to be very rare sets, so-called secret sets, which as far as I know have alternate colours or different parts. How such a secret set is packacked in a covering box (if a regular set is missing then) I don't know and neither do I know if this is still practiced.
Besides food there are sometimes kitchen electronics or other household items too and for a while now Re-ment publishes many series in cooperation with Disney or Sanrio. Those sport famous characters like Hello Kitty or Winnieh Pooh then. The 1:6 - or sometimes 1:12 - scale makes the items perfect for use with fashion dolls. The series that come with small electronics like coffee machines or toasters are popular with dollhouse builders, of course. All items are very detailed and often come with movable or removable parts.
Apart from such series there are also so-called mascots or charms. Those are small motifs with eyelets for putting them on a necklace or using them as cellphone charm.
The pictures below show a typical covering box on the left. At the bottom you can see the seal which guarantees a complete set. The box contains eight smaller boxes like shown to the right in the photo and that box contains the individual parts - wrapped in plastic - , a small flyer with a photo of the set and several cutout accessoires like napkins, playmoney, place mats etc and a chewing gum. Series with little individual parts can be sold in blind bags like shown in the middle photo. The items are wrapped in thin cardboard so you can't feel the content. On the right is another pretty Sanrio set.
My opinion on Re-ment:
For a while collecting Re-ment was almost more fun for me than the actual dolls. It's an expensive hobby but I'm a big fan of miniatures and the level of detail in Re-ment is often spectacular. Especially my dollhouse benefits of many useful things I already got, from toasters to tins. Then for a long time there were only Disney series and pink sweets and I lost interest. Just when the series slowly became more interesting again and I bought a lot of Re-ment again the duplicates and some unreliable Ebay vendours likewise spoiled my fun. When I buy Re-ment now I only buy a whole box and since that is quite expensive I have to like at least six out of eight sets. Else I pass.
Apart from my disappointment with Plastikpop the quality of the items can't always convince me anymore. Although the details are still great I sometimes have defect parts in a set. Not very often but it happens. The mould lines are sometimes at weird places too that make them too obvious. Much worse is that more and more often items are made of soft plastic. They smell bad, thus contain much softener and are carcinogenic und they like to stick to other items after a while and when removing them they often take colour from the other item with them.
Another downside that can't be avoided is that many items recur. Of course I was excited when I got my first toaster but not so much anymore when I got the third. For other items however I'm waiting in vain, like a new series with camping supplies, potted plants or tools. Plastikpop doesn't get every series, either, so I miss some things. I don't blame them for that - maybe the sets were already sold out in Japan.
At the moment the things I wish for the most are: a breadmaker (which I missed in the series of which I own sets 1-4 twice - someone wanna trade?), an electric kettle, a new kitchenette, outdoor sets, potted plants (if there is one in a set I never got that particular set), a telephone, a gaming console (preferably not an X-Box), new Japanese and European meals (especially pizza and noodles again), Xmas food, Halloween sweets, a toolbox and traditional Japanese items (there once was a series with paper umbrellas, fans, sandals etc). All of that was made before and new versions would be much appreciated. Preferable without Rilakkuma, Hello Kitty or Disney characters. Okay, if there was another series with Starry Night characters I would probably buy it since I only got two packs of the last one. My Melody is also very cute with its bunnies and shrooms.
Princess of Power was a series of action figures directed specifally towards girls. The series profited of the success of Masters of the Universe and was produced by Mattel, probably as a test to see if girls would buy such figures or not.
Die figures centered around the main character She-ra were sold from 1985 to 1987 and some of the characters have been revived as new action figures for a short time some years later when there was a new go at Masters of the Universe action figures.
She-ra resp. her alter ego princess Adora is the sister of He-man/Prince Adam, the hero of the back then very popular toy line Masters of the Universe. Depending on which storyline you follow she has either been kidnapped and was brought to the neighbour planet Etheria as a baby where she grew up alone in Crystal Castle or she was kidnapped and raised on Etheria as one of the bad ones and later broke free of the mind control her stepfather held her under.
Similar to Superman She-ra usually leads an unremarkable life as princess Adora and almost none of her numerous friends knows that she is the mysterious She-ra who time and time again saves the land from the plans of the evil catdemon Catra.
Princess of Power is rather similar to action figures than to dolls since most of the clothes like shoes, armlets and the "bathing suit" are modelled and printed on. Only skirts and a few accessoires are made of fabric and the dolls have combable hair. The dolls are appr. 14cm tall and they can move their arms and legs to the front and the head sidewards. Their legs are made of hard plastic and can not - like e.g. Barbie often can - bend in the knee. Each comes with a comb and a shield and most have a gem in their chest or belly. Apart from doll figures there was also additional stuff like the crystal horses, the Crystal Castle or the big swan Enchanta which allows to dolls to ride on it. Of course Clawdeen, Catra's pink cat mount with locks and diamond eyes, was available too. There were also additional fashion sets for the numerous parties.
There was only one male doll, the bowman Bow who of course is deeply in love with She-ra and fought over by all the other ladies.
Each doll comes with a special gimmick fitting its role.
She-ra for instance comes with the special mask that's seen on the photos. On the first photo she is princess Adora, on the other picture she's She-ra, the Princess of Power. Her arms move simultaneously to play out the transformation process and she comes with her magic sword and stars on the inside of her cape. (Actually this is Magic Cape She-ra. I never saw the first, regular She-ra anywhere in Germany.) The third photo shows Angella, the friend and spy whose wings open when the button behind her head is pushed. Then there's the mermaid Mermista, besides others, who has a removable mermaid fin and carries a shell on her back which allows her to spurt water from her necklace. The spy Peek-a-blue carries peacock feathers on her back which can open to the typical peacock wheel. Perfuma, princess of wild flowers, carries a large flower on her back which can open and is scented and butterfly faerie Flutterina can flutter up and down on a cord with her butterfly wings moving. Sweet Bee glows in the dark and her wings have two sides - one glittery, normal one and a red one which she uses to warn her friends of danger. Angella's daughter glimmer, the Guardian of Light, also comes with a tiara and magic wand that glow in the dark. Catra has some kind of karate chop function which makes a scratchy noise and double agent Double Trouble even has two faces beneath her helmet and can wear one or the other. Other figures like Frosta or Netossa have special weapons.
Merchandize for Princess of Power included a series of audio dramas (at least in Germany, with 10 regular episodes and one promotional episode which was bundled with the She-ra doll) and a cartoon series and some movies which were crossovers with Masters of the Universe. Additionally each figure came bundled with a tiny, often nicely drawn comic book. If unlucky these comics were written in English (or worse, in French or Spanish), which furthered my efforts to start learning English in primary school to be able to understand these stories as soon as possible.
A real comic series like they did for Masters was not made for Princess of Power, at least not in Germany.
The stark contrast between the cartoon, the audio dramas, the comics and the quarterly catalogues was irritating even for me as a child. In the cartoon Adora grew up in the Horde, a criminal organsation that reigns terror on Etheria. After being converted to the "good guys" by her brother He-man she joins the rebellion as one of their leaders and fights there against the Horde's Troopers, her main opponent being Hordak, who's a known bad guy from Masters. Catra and several others are his lieutnants here. The Horde's goal is to conquer all of Etheria and squash the rebellion, while the rebellion of course strives to drive the Horde off Etheria once and for all.
When following the audio dramas, however, Adora is the leader of all Etheria, the peaceful, sunny planet which knows only one thread - a vulcano on the other side of the river. In this vulcano lives a magician who's Catra's master and sometimes he sends black clouds across the river to take away Etheria's sunshine. Sheer horror! Then Adora turns into She-ra and scares off the clouds with her magic sword. Catra's own evil plans usually consist of spinning intrigues between the princesses. There are parties of all kind all the time and that one princess or faerie who felt treated worst at the party is usually talked into doing something exceptionally bad later by Catra. Then She-ra cleans up the machinations, everything is well again and the next party is held. Catra's ultimate goal is the conquest of Crystal Castle to become leader of Etheria herself. This is despite more and more facts becoming visible each episode that she can't even conquer Crystal Castle, due to the magic well or thanks to other permanent spell effects she can't bare. So why she wants the castle so dearly - especially since there is seldom any talk of population and Adora doesn't do any visible leading of anyone - is beyond me.
So while in the cartoon Adora/She-ra shoots laser beams with her sword all the time to dismember robots, throws monsters several miles away like she were Hulk or helps calm down an angry dragon by adding bowties to its hair the audio dramas consist of coffee parties with cat fights and cloudy skies.
The small comics however contain stories which fit the typical fantasy line for young people best. Here Catra may lead a demon horde against Crystal Castle, Frosta uses her icewheel to freeze opponents or flesheating plants put the lives of the faeries and princesses in danger. Even Bow may admit his love for Adora once. In the comic which came with the She-ra doll the story is told how Hordak takes Adora away and brings her to Etheria. He doesn't seem to have raised her in this story though. (Which fits the storyline of Masters of the Universe, since actually he came back to Eternia with new powers some years later and did not stay on Etheria.) Zoar, the guardian of Castle Grayskull, sends He-man off to Etheria to find her and thus the secret about the siblings is solved.
Of all stories I liked these tiny comic books best, especially since their drawing style was rather like e.g. Conan the Barbarian comics and less like typical comics for kids. Sadly they had very few pages each and thus could never tell really strong stories.
My opinion of Princess of Power:
Since I used to play with my brother's Masters figures before I was totally excited by Princess of Power, of course. She-ra had a sword, after all, and I loved the overll strong fantasy influence of the toy line, which was full of princesses and faeries with wings, mermaid fins or peacock feathers on their backs. Stylable hair and the glittering gems posed an additional point of interest to the little girl I was. Sadly there weren't many figures.
Of course even back then there were things that annoyed me. It only took days for the paint on the shoe tips and heels to scratch off and the stickers on the clothes - which at least were usually sewn on - kept breaking and loosing bits and bobs. The worst were the horses. All of my friends ended up with horses with no tail, since those were only fixated by a tiny plastic tube inside the transparent horse. I acted quickly and saved them with rubber bands at the hairline or by braiding their tails so the hair couldn't get loose.
Of course many things broke because I was little and well, played a lot with these figures! When I think about that they endured quite a lot and just yesterday I thought that the elastics which keep She-ras cape in place around her wrists are in quite good shape for something that's over 25 years old. When I look at the elastics I bought for my sewing stash two years ago... had to throw out some of them unused since they started to crumble.
One day the magical well Crystal Falls didn't bubble anymore without wetting the carpet, Sea-Harps build-in harp broke with one last "PLONG", the ridable butterfly Butterflier lost the hooks that held the figures, small clothing items like chokers or belts ripped or devided into separate materials and Peek-a-blue's feathers had to be glued on because I insisted on opening them as wide as on the photo.
When I remember how often these dolls were sunk in the garden pond, accompanied me to the sandbox or forest and that I played with them for about seven years straight then the quality is actually abnormally high!
There are only two things which annoy me besides the horse tails: First of, Bow - of all things - is the only one who didn't age well. The figure is sticky from head to toe and usually that's a sure sign of softener going awry. I had this effect on several old Barbies and other dolls and never found a working method to counter it. The poor guy sits in a plastic bag and hopes for the day I do find a working solution in the depths of the internet.
Secondly, there was one really badly designed detail, and that's the horse's wings. Crystal Sunbeam and Crystal Moondancer one day simply lost their wings - they were connected with the saddle girth and went through holes in the saddle. One day the strain just got too much. In case of Crystal Spirit I even cut off the wings on my own accord. Why? Because he is just a simple crystal horse when Adora is herself. Only when she turns into She-ra Spirit becomes the winged unicorn Swiftwind. It was impossible to take off the wings without taking off the whole saddle though. So I cut them off and used rubber bands and duct tape. Will be fun to get that back into decent shape today. ;)
I liked the catalogues and the mini comics and as a child I naturally also listened to the audio dramas and later watched the cartoon, the latter I was never fond of though. Although She-ra was from time to time allowed to really fight in that none of the characters had any resemblance to the toys though and there were barely any characters I knew anyway. Most characters from the cartoon were never available as toys in turn, which I didn't mind because I didn't like them.
Sadly the series died off quickly and there were figures all the time which were never avaibable in Germany. Of the first She-ra and Catra I only saw drawings on the back of another doll's package. Sweet Bee and the magical owl Kowl were also offlimits here - luckily someone bought them for me in the Netherlands. I never got my hands on the sorceress Castaspella though, which always saddened me. Towards the end Mattel probably gave up trying to sell the figures everywhere. While Netossa was on sale here - and I loved her as she was the first black person in the series! - the other characters and new versions of She-ra and Catra advertized with her I could never find anywhere. And then Princess of Power was dead.
Everything I own of Princess of Power sits in a box on the attic, including the Crystal Castle, the magical well Crystal Falls and all mounts and additional outfits. Many items aren't complete anymore and sometimes need heavy restauration. I will do my best to repair these figures as best as I can since they shall not stay missing in the galleries. Princess of Power cemented my love for fantasy and I can't count how many hours I spent drawing these figures, copying poses from the tiny comics or thinking up stories. So my love for writing and drawing originates from these toys too and I will never give them away. :)