A philosophy of wood working I subscribe to is that of "cutting from large piece/s into as small dimensions as possible and putting them back together and hope one ends up with a working finished project". Okay, I made that up to explain why most of my projects are that way as readers of this blog will readily observe from many of my projects. Actually, it probably makes more work. However, if you plan it right, basic parts are easier and safer to work with, including during the sanding and finishing phase of the project.
Here, this grow light fixture can be put together with two knurled knobs at the top ends without tools. (Except, of course where screws were used to fasten the feet to the uprights initially). With the bottom "T" in place at each leg, this fixture can be assembled and disassembled by hand.
The special light spectrum put out by the grow light is needed for indoor growing, even including normally outdoor plants, such as papaya and tamarind. Both these plants (grown from seeds) will be transplanted next spring. Meanwhile, they serve as indoor CO2/oxygen exchangers. One tamarind tree outside made it through last winter and it is four feet tall now. Papayas don't do too well in winter. A warm winter one year gave our papayas a two year growing season.
(1) It started with the mantle above the fireplace that came with the house (photo below)
(2) The top ledge of the TV cabinet which I did years ago took that same round-over shape as in the mantle.
(3) The light fixture shown here that has a grow light for the in-ground house plants below it was fashioned the same way. I almost made it look exactly like the mantle.
(4) I replaced the original light fixture (top of photo, below) again with the same theme.
The compulsion to stick to the "theme" is indeed a woodworker's compulsion (on my part). One may stand from one point in the family room and see all five of these "themed" pieces, including the light fixture that is by the hallway next to the front door in the living room. It is true woodworkers do have their idiosyncrasies. (Enlarge the photo to see why). Guilty as charged. And any future similarly themed project will have to be viewable from the same single location. Idiosyncrasy, what else is there to say.
One more tip: Notice the round planter on a white pedestal (photo below)? It rotates on ball bearings. See next photos farther down.
I designed this rotatable pedestal with a pivot rod and globe ball bearings for easy access during watering (the glass non-draining planter is heavy, a standard Lazy Susan hardware may not hold up over time) and for even exposure to the light source. I or my wife will just have to from to time manually rotate the planter.