
It's antique, what can you do?Surely you shouldn't be able to lift a light fitting off the wall, it's rubbish

They are far from flimsy. When was the last time you saw a painting which weighed less than one of those lights?Agree with Harry just need a stronger bracket than the flimsy picture hanger .



You could pull those straight off the wall changing the bulb .They are far from flimsy. When was the last time you saw a painting which weighed less than one of those lights?

I would have called it a spigot, it was quite a substantial fitting, it did need to take the weight of the oil in the lamp. I used conduit boxes for my wall lamps, but not with a conduit hole, as that would result is screws at 45 degrees, and I wanted screws horizontal, and the lamp screwed directly into the conduit box.Lots of old wall lights were simply 'hooked' onto a nail or screw.

but wooden "backplates"

Pattress!
When I installed our three wall lights, I thought they would look odd without them, so I turned some up, to match, in the lathe. Making a recess in the back, for the connectors, polished up they look great.
A possible solution, which depends on personal taste, room decor, skills or access to someone with skills, but wooden "backplates" could be made, the lights permanently fixed to them, and the wooden plates hung on the wall via keyhole slots on the back.
If a Wooden Backplate is madeThey can be made of almost any wood, to match the room, stained/finished to the style of the room. They could be rectangular, oval, triangular, shield-shaped...
The edges could be just eased, or moulded. If moulded, a finish option could be a nice chalk paint and gold leaf (or Dutch metal) applied to the edges.
The world's your lobster.
And could be done without a lathe - if you were an OK woodworker you could cut them with a jigsaw or bandsaw, and do the edges with a router.
Or if you can't DIY, try tracking down a hobbyist via woodwoorking forums, the nearest Men's Shed, U3A, sticking a card in the newsagent's window...
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