All copyrighted material herein should be seen as spoof fan-art.
Toy Customs
Anything you can imagine.
For kids and collectors.
They make great gifts.
Contact our artist today for a quote, gill.jeremiah@gmail.com
When ordering items for special events, such as birthdays or holidays, remember to allow time for production and shipping, which can vary widely depending on the order.
Ghost Rider
Ghostbusters chasing Ghost Rider
The Ghost Rider figure was a complex customization, combining accessories from several Imaginext figurines. The Ecto1 came as-is, but has customized ‘Busters in the cab and a Photoshopped light on top in this image. The Rider’s head and shoulders piece is removeable, leaving him as his human incarnation.
Ghostbusters
Egon Spengler custom. Eventually we’ll give him the little logo on his jacket.
To create the Spengler figure, we just take a head from this Scooby-Doo villain and put it on the Imaginext ‘Ghost Buster’ figure, then we have an extra head that we use later for a Terminator Rev 9
Spengler with goggles. The only customized element so far on this one is the head swap.
Terminator
Model T-101
Customized Terminator and Harley
This figure was one of the easier customizations to do. Starting with the Imaginext ‘Burglar’ figure, all he needed was a little black paint to cover a skull emblem on his jacket and then the iconic red dot in his sunglasses.
It may not be Arnold, but it’s definitely a Terminator.
Rev 9
The Rev 9 from Terminator, Dark Fate
To create the Rev 9, we used an Imaginext army guy and gave him a Latino head from another figure. A fairly simple and straightforward custom.
Carnage
This custom Carnage figure was made from an old Playskool Spidey and a battle axe. Removed one hand, sharpened the fingers on the other, clipped some notches in his feet, clipped the axe handle below the hilt, glued him together and gave him a horrific paint job! Kind of ironic and appropriate to make Spidey into one of his nemeses.
X-Men
Colossus
This revisioning of Colossus was created using two different figures and some accessories from a third one, along with a paint job.
Not sure who these guys are; I got them out of the discount bin at a local toy store. But they were perfect for Colossus. The big guy already had a good yellow base for the blue and yellow X-Men costume, and his arms and legs were already segmented and metallic. The heads on his chest will end up in a custom Dracula’s castle later on. The little guy’s head could not be a better base for Colossus’ head.
Starting to look like Colossus already. Those green segmented cables on his chest came from an Imaginext Bane figure’s accessory. They were cut off and leftover from one of the pieces used to create the Ghost Rider figure at the top of the page. They matched this figure perfectly!
Just before the paint job. Some other little pieces from the spare parts bin filled in the remaining holes in his chest.
Size comparison next to an average-sized Imaginext figure, another custom, Cyclops.
Cyclops
Custom Cyclops figure. This one was a combination of one Imaginext fireman figure and a Robin from the discount bin, then the paint job.
My first plan was to use this Green Lantern’s head for Cyclops, but his neck was too thick to fit in the fireman’s neck hole. The fireman had a great color scheme for the base to an X-Men uniform. He also had cool tactical boots and lots of textures and details to use in the paint job.
This discount bin Robin’s head fit perfectly on the Imaginext fireman figure, even though he’s about twice as tall. The hair also looked right for Cyclops.
Paint job in process
Nightcrawler
Custom Nightcrawler figure, made from one figure and a weedwacker accessory, plus the paint job, of course.
Not sure who this character is, but I’m sure someone can tell me. The weedwacker came with the Imaginext ‘Zombie’ figure, for some reason. It was the perfect shape to start with for Nightcrawler’s tail.
Just drill a hole for the tail and start carving away at the weedwacker!
Previsual before carving the tail and giving him forked toes.
Bishop
This custom Bishop figure was created using an Imaginext Superman figure and a couple of guys from the discount bin, plus a gun from the accessories box and some blue hands from the spare parts bin.
Started with a Superman, removed his head and cape. Saved the cape for later to use as Bishop’s bandana, and the head to use with a Black Power Ranger body for a custom Punisher figure. This particular model of Superman had no neck hole, so we drilled one out and used a small fist from the spare parts bin as a connector piece, with some Gorilla Glue, to hold on the head that we used for Bishop.
Not sure who this character was that donated the head. He came out of the discount bin at the toy store. It was the perfect shape for Bishop. The blue body was perfect for an X-Men base. Whenever possible, it’s best to use the same base color on the moving contact points (shoulders, leg joints) to avoid peeling paint.
Stole a belt pouch from this discount bin figure (the same one who’s head ended up on Colossus) and used it for Bishop’s cargo pocket. You can do a lot with an X-acto knife and some Gorilla Glue!
This was before gluing the head in place. The neck seam will look better once the bandana is in place.
A little modification . . .
. . . and we have a pretty close reproduction of Bishop’s iconic futuristic gun.
Superman’s cape cut to shape and distressed a little so it’s battle-worn, make it a bandana and then the custom paint job! The inner part of the hands were left their original color, which prevents peeling paint during use and also adds another design element, giving the costume a little more detail.
Ready for some time-travel!
Santa
This Battle Santa custom was put together using the Imaginext Battle Santa figure, giving him a custom-tailored coat, hat and gift sack, and Bane’s vehicle, with added jingle bells (and red-nosed missile)!
The space on the back of the sled is perfect for storing Santa’s gift sack!
Hand-stitched custom-tailored Santa suit with attention to fine detail. Keep in mind this figure is only 3 inches tall, from head to foot.
The original toy came with bare arms and no coat, so we made him one! He’s tough, but there’s no need to be a show-off. Can’t have Santa getting sick.
Made sure to leave plenty of room in the open cuffs to allow easy access for his hands in and out of the sleeves. The hat can be worn up or down, and is attached to the collar of the coat, so it won’t get lost.
To place your custom order, email gill.jeremiah@gmail.com
Order a custom toy of your loved one!
Infinity Boy
This custom figure was made special for a little boy’s birthday present. He had invented his own character, his own alter-ego superhero with infinite powers, named Infinity Boy! So we made a character that looked like him, with the same eye and hair color, a cape with collar, and an infinity symbol on his chest! The possibilities are endless.
Two figures, a piece of armor from the accessories bin, and a couple of Superman capes, some Gorilla Glue and a custom paint job with Testors acrylic model paints, and we have . . .
Infinity Boy!
Fantastic 4
Invisible Girl
Fantastic 4’s Reed Richards, aka Mister Fantastic custom, made from a Superman body with Power Ranger hands. The Power Ranger wrist joint was further up the arm than Superman’s, so it gave the finished product extra long arms, which is appropriate for stretchy Mr. F. (this figure received a little more touch-up around the edges after this picture was taken)
This custom Invisible Girl from Fantastic 4 was made from an Imaginext Supergirl figure
cut off the cape (which later became part of Infinity Boy’s cape)
gave her a good coat of blue, covering the Super symbol
Then gave her a brand-new Fantastic 4 uniform!
Human Torch
Made this Human Torch custom using a Flash body and a head from a character out of the discount bin, then a hand-painted flame job with Testors acrylic model paints
A little head swap . . . had to build him a neck out of something from the spare parts bin
Captain Marvel
This Captain Marvel custom is another one made from an Imaginext Supergirl figure
Gave her a haircut (the hair later became part of the flames on the Ghost Rider figure’s head) trimmed down her skirt and removed the cape (which became part of the Infinity Boy figure’s cape)
then the paint job and helmet
Lots of customizing went into that helmet
The helmet’s plasma mohawk is transparent