Love, love, love these lights! (I ordered two.) These were for a very tight space (very little clearance at top) on a vintage mobile home made back in the 1960's which had two exterior, jelly jar-type lamps under an overhang on one end of the home. My new lights fit perfectly! The galvanized metal is perfect for my farmhouse look, too! Very nice quality. So impressed and so-o-o-o happy! Worth every penny. I was getting so disappointed with the choices for the space I had to deal with. I had purchased a large, goose-neck, galvanized porch light for my entry last year, love it, and it dawned on me that someone might have small galvanized, exterior fixtures. (No local stores had anything other than jelly-jar lights to fit the small space I had to work with and I really don't like the look of jelly-jar lights.) So, it finally dawned on me to google "galvanized exterior lights." That's how I stumbled onto these jewels!The following will apply to very few people who purchase these lights, but read on if you find you want a bit more clearance at the top of the light. It's not going to give you much more room but it was enough in my case. (NOTE:Clearance is absolutely NOT the fault of the manufacturer or the seller. I want to make that perfectly clear. I modified the mounting bracket a bit for my particular situation and maybe someone else can use the info. I can't stress enough that these lights fit my space right out of the box, but I wanted just a bit more breathing room at the top, thought of the following, tried it, and it worked.)I reversed the pieces of mounting bracket (the two-piece, silver bracket that swivels and gets attached to the electrical box) at the swivel point and it worked out great. You have to take it apart. Just take the two, tiny screws out where the mounting bracket crosses, reverse, and reinsert the screws. This makes the one bracket off center to the other but didn't affect the final assembly in my case nor did it affect the exterior appearance. (The bracket will look more like a "t" than a "+".)If you need to account for the offset, you can adjust a tiny bit further since the bracket also has elongated slots in which screws insert and attach the bracket to the electrical box. When I reversed the cross piece, the bracket almost extended beyond the electrical box when mounted, which would have affected the ability to properly mount the light, exposing part of the electrical box and leaving a gap between the light and the wall. This would have been unacceptable. If the bracket had extended much further, I could have ground some of the metal off the bracket but didn't have to in my case.They even tinned (soldered) the end of the ground wire. A sign of quality in my book. I've not seen this too often in other lighting I've purchased over the years. The LED's are recessed far enough into the shade I have to practically walk under the lights to see them. In other words, the LED's don't detract from a traditional look from the street, sidewalk, driveway, or even right beside the house, and the light is not harsh while supplying plenty of light.I would suggest the manufacturer tape the acorn nuts (or finials) to the screws that are already mounted in the bracket.One worked it's way off the screw during shipment and I thought it got lost during packing. I found it, however, and it helped make a simple job very pleasant. (They have the 3 wire nuts, 2 screws that mount bracket to box, and instructions in a sealed bag, which I really appreciate. But they just screw the acorn nuts to the backplate screws in the mounting bracket, which, if they work loose during shipment, they can be all over the box and possibly fall out a seam in the box during shipment if the box isn't taped good enough.) I would also suggest the manufacturer make the back plate just a little more wide. I have 4 1/2" diam. round boxes and they just barely span the width.I don't have any pictures at the moment but, if possible to edit this review at a later date, I intend to post some of my finished project. The lights are mounted and work great; but I will be painting my mobile home and trimming out windows, too, before Labor Day. So, the job isn't absolutely complete and I want really nice pictures:)