Here is my advice based on what you are trying to do.
I would leave the kit as is,because,
1. The vintage MIJ kits that are worth the most money are the ones that have uncommon and unusual wraps,and uncommon wraps that are delicate,and in good condition.The satin flame wraps like yours are less common,and hard to find in good condition,they scratched and would crack easily,from the pics yours look to be in very
good condition.Stripping that wrap off those drums would take them from being worth something,maybe 300.00 ish,to almost nothing,like 50.00 to 100.00
2. As far as I know the MIJ kits from this period were not offered with 8 10 15 toms etc,you might find a 14 Floor and a 14 snare in that finish,but if you want to find those sizes in that wrap you may find the satin flame in that color in U.S. or Euro, British drums,in the the sizes you are looking for,the closest match that might have the offset lugs on the smaller toms could be Premier or Sonor Teardrops.I have seen a few Sonor T's that have a satin wrap close to that color but can't remember seeing the small toms.I am pretty sure that ludwig and rogers did not offer satin flame,but Camco sling and gretsch did.I would check at Sonor Museum.
Another option could be see if you can find the Satin Flame is offered by one of the wrap companies,like precision or Jammin Sams,and finding some drums in the sizes you are looking for and re wrapping them.
As far as putting together a monster rack kit goes foe availability I would go 80's 90's drums,on the less expensive end Tama rockstars,imperial stars,Pearl export etc,more expensive the pro linesand wrapping them in satin flame,or if you want that kind of vibe cheaper you could find some wild/psychedelic contact paper type of product.