Let me be the first - gorgeous!Love all the bass drum attachments, and it looks great under the lights!
It is a truly beautiful kit. My son and I have a similar one from 1962 but we both still salivate when we see another early WMP Super Classic kit in such good condition.
You mentioned the bass drum attachments .I know you are relatively new to all this, so I'm not sure what you may or may not know about this kit or Buddy Rich's general drum set configuration.
Buddy Rich, for whom this kit is named in the catalog, always had two base drum mounted cymbal stands. The one to his left was for a splash cymbal mounted high and flat, and the one to his right was for his ride cymbal which was always mounted very low with a slight tilt.
Additionally he had two crash cymbals mounted high and almost flat on stands to the left and right side of the kit. The pictured kit shows the crash cymbals, as well as the splash cymbal, at a much greater angle than Buddy would have mounted them. Of course everyone should adjust things to match their playing style and personal comfort rather then be a slave to the exact configuration used by someone else.
In addition, back then Buddy generally played a 14"x24" bass drum. I believe the pictured drum is a 14x22. Buddy also almost always had a second 16x16 floor tom but I believe he rarely, if ever, actually played the second floor tom. Finally, markrocks68's wood snare drum is the six lug Pioneer model rather than the eight lug Super Classic snare seen in the catalog. Even though the Pioneer model was lower priced, there are many drummers who believe it was a superior sounding snare drum.
None of the differences from Buddy's configuration detracts from this kit in any way, but I thought you might be interested in some historic details. My apologies if you knew all this. If anyone has any corrections or additions to my comments they will be very welcome.