A light below.

TomY

Alden Forum Moderator
Jun 22, 2004
2,768
Alden 38' Challenger yawl Rockport Harbor
I was tied up next to this big old motor yacht this season for a few nights. I loved the curtains in the 'windows' and especially, this table lamp, in the aft port.

The cloth lamp shade cast a soft warm light inside the cabin at night and was also a welcoming light to those of us around the harbor.
Cairn table lamp inspiration.jpg

A table lamp in a boat. You don't see those much, for obvious reasons. Boat lighting is fixed, often glaring and not much to look at from outside.

The passage between our V-berth and saloon has always been dark. There is a fiddled shelf above the hanging locker that's never found a good use. The high shelf collects stuff of no use. And there is a small fixed port outboard. This got me thinking...

Unlike the motor yacht, the dark space on our boat is small. They don't make table lamps small enough. Could I make a 'mock up'?
Lamp holder.jpg
I had a couple of household base 5 Watt, 12VDC LED bulbs left over from converting all our cabin lights. I knew small lamp shades were available as 'Chandelier shades'. They clip on the smaller bulbs in typical household chandeliers which are about the size of the 5W LED bulbs I had.

The whole lamp had to be less than 10" high to scale into the small space. I needed something for a short, stable base. Several days, weeks,... I spied a suitable object: A rolled Maine beach stone.

My family collects found art out sailing, the stone was in the garden (and they are throughout our old boat).

The only hard part was pushing(sweating) a masonry bit through the stone (granite I think) on a drill press. I made the hole a snug fit on the typical threaded pipe for lamps. Not high enough so I added another smaller stone making it officially a Cairn. The tiny lamp fits right in with our 'decor'.
Cairn table lamp.jpg

After setting my parts in epoxy I ran wire through the bottom of the rolled stone. For a base, I laid a thick donut of silicone around the stone and set it - plumb - on a piece of plexiglass sprayed with cooking oil(took a day and a half to firm up).

It's amazingly stable and the silicone grips tenaciously. As a back up, the wiring runs through a small hole and is tied below, to keep it put.
Light 2_.jpg

The soft warm light on the shelf nicely lights the passageway now. Mary Ann, who covets her beach stones, loves it!

I was anxious to see it from the other side. Not bad. Another harbor light.
Cairn table lamp boat dusk close.jpg


What do you think? How will the household stuff hold up? I'll test it for the rest of the season, maybe make another. Maybe one stowed with a cord for the saloon table or galley when at anchor?,...
 
Last edited:
Jan 11, 2014
13,050
Sabre 362 113 Fair Haven, NY
Looks warm and inviting. Nice touch.

My wife also likes found art, in particular small pieces of drift wood.
 
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Aug 2, 2005
1,155
Pearson 33-2 & Typhoon 18 Seneca Lake
Very inventive use of rocks and wiring! Beautiful look from outside the "boat". By the way....Your yacht ain't bad lookin' neither!
 
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Likes: TomY
Oct 26, 2010
2,155
Hunter 40.5 Beaufort, SC
Beautiful Tom - looks like a cozy home. Beautiful boat too!!!!

The engineer in me was thinking about ways to make it "bullet proof". I think you said you had already put a hole in the wood below the lamp for the wire. Does the threaded pipe go all the way through both stones? If it does (or it can with a little more sweat) how about a pipe threaded on both ends long enough to go all the way through the stones and the wood shelf below. Then put the wire through and a large washer and nut on the underside threaded pipe and it would be pretty secure, even when heeled over. Make sure to put some chafe protection on the end of the lower pipe so it doesn't wear the wire where it exits the pipe. Sorry, couldn't help the suggestion - the engineer in me comes out now and then.
 

TomY

Alden Forum Moderator
Jun 22, 2004
2,768
Alden 38' Challenger yawl Rockport Harbor
Looks warm and inviting. Nice touch.

My wife also likes found art, in particular small pieces of drift wood.
Piles of driftwood have come through our boat, most ending up at home. The kids used to make 'Buoy Boats'. A sort of Maine island seat of your pants version of Pond Sailers. They'd find a lobster pot buoy conveniently split in half (not hard to find), gouge out a slot in the bottom (round half) for a stone keel, a stick for a mast in the flat top and scrap of plastic for a sail.

They actually sailed quite well(so much for overthinking sail boat design)!

More than 10 years ago, my son made me a smaller version out of a small buoy. With his cherished Swiss Army knife he sawed it in half, fit a stone keel and carefully stepped a twig spar and mainsail of plastic. He used sail repair thread, duct tape. It sailed!

But it became too precious to me so I fit it on a plexiglass stand and mounted it on a bulkhead over the fireplace. It's been there ever since.
Cairn table lamp art style on Xmas.jpg
 
Last edited:

TomY

Alden Forum Moderator
Jun 22, 2004
2,768
Alden 38' Challenger yawl Rockport Harbor
Beautiful Tom - looks like a cozy home. Beautiful boat too!!!!

The engineer in me was thinking about ways to make it "bullet proof". I think you said you had already put a hole in the wood below the lamp for the wire. Does the threaded pipe go all the way through both stones? If it does (or it can with a little more sweat) how about a pipe threaded on both ends long enough to go all the way through the stones and the wood shelf below. Then put the wire through and a large washer and nut on the underside threaded pipe and it would be pretty secure, even when heeled over. Make sure to put some chafe protection on the end of the lower pipe so it doesn't wear the wire where it exits the pipe. Sorry, couldn't help the suggestion - the engineer in me comes out now and then.
I didn't run the pipe through and bolt because I was tired of drilling and didn't want to get into cutting a larger recessed hole for a nut. So I epoxied it together. The silicone donut encases the wires which (you might see them) exit out the rear before ducking down the hole.

Your idea is the perfect solution as it eliminates the recess and through bolting the lamp, would make an absolute, "Blue Water Table Lamp" version. :)
 
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Gunni

.
Mar 16, 2010
5,937
Beneteau 411 Oceanis Annapolis
Jeanneau has been installing the Osculati removable table lamp in their boats for years. Two part system; power socket and table lamp. They typically have a socket in the saloon and one installed in the cockpit table so that you can unplug and move the lamp:
 
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Likes: TomY
Oct 1, 2007
1,865
Boston Whaler Super Sport Pt. Judith
I was tied up next to this big old motor yacht this season for a few nights. I loved the curtains in the 'windows' and especially, this table lamp, in the aft port.

The cloth lamp shade cast a soft warm light inside the cabin at night and was also a welcoming light to those of us around the harbor.
View attachment 156235
A table lamp in a boat. You don't see those much, for obvious reasons. Boat lighting is fixed, often glaring and not much to look at from outside.

The passage between our V-berth and saloon has always been dark. There is a fiddled shelf above the hanging locker that's never found a good use. The high shelf collects stuff of no use. And there is a small fixed port outboard. This got me thinking...

Unlike the motor yacht, the dark space on our boat is small. They don't make table lamps small enough. Could I make a 'mock up'?
View attachment 156237
I had a couple of household base 5 Watt, 12VDC LED bulbs left over from converting all our cabin lights. I knew small lamp shades were available as 'Chandelier shades'. They clip on the smaller bulbs in typical household chandeliers which are about the size of the 5W LED bulbs I had.

The whole lamp had to be less than 10" high to scale into the small space. I needed something for a short, stable base. Several days, weeks,... I spied a suitable object: A rolled Maine beach stone.

My family collects found art out sailing, the stone was in the garden (and they are throughout our old boat).

The only hard part was pushing(sweating) a masonry bit through the stone (granite I think) on a drill press. I made the hole a snug fit on the typical threaded pipe for lamps. Not high enough so I added another smaller stone making it officially a Cairn. The tiny lamp fits right in with our 'decor'.
View attachment 156238
After setting my parts in epoxy I ran wire through the bottom of the rolled stone. For a base, I laid a thick donut of silicone around the stone and set it - plumb - on a piece of plexiglass sprayed with cooking oil(took a day and a half to firm up).

It's amazingly stable and the silicone grips tenaciously. As a back up, the wiring runs through a small hole and is tied below, to keep it put.
View attachment 156239
The soft warm light on the shelf nicely lights the passageway now. Mary Ann, who covets her beach stones, loves it!

I was anxious to see it from the other side. Not bad. Another harbor light.
View attachment 156240

What do you think? How will the household stuff hold up? I'll test it for the rest of the season, maybe make another. Maybe one stowed with a cord for the saloon table or galley when at anchor?,...
Ingenious and beautiful Tom. Fits your boat perfectly.
 
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Jul 29, 2017
169
Catalina 380 Los Angeles
I love it. I've been looking for something to take the place of the lamp my wife uses in the aft cabin at night. You gave me ideas. Thank you so much. It's one reason I love this forum.
 
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Likes: TomY
Mar 20, 2015
3,244
C&C 30 Mk1 Winnipeg
tom… while i always say i prefer steel boats… photos of your boat has me thinking traitorous thoughts.

Then again, i'd be so paranoid I commission a zodiac company to make a continuous inflatable fender for it.

500SL vs Unimog ?
 
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MitchM

.
Jan 20, 2005
1,031
Nauticat 321 pilothouse 32 Erie PA
beautiful job on the lamp! now i have a use for the 500 polished beach pebbles i have been collecting from hawaii to canada ... put my lamp parts on top, run wire thru the pebbles, glue the pebbles together , plug in .... thanks !!