I guess I can hijack my own thread, right?

I mentioned above about the procedure when rounding over these frames using a handheld router. "Clamp, pass the router, unclamp, rotate workpiece, clamp, pass the router, etc." What a pain in the ass (spelled out for emphasis). I've used a benchtop router table before. Passing all the pieces for this facade, both inner and outer roundovers would take less than 5 minutes, total, vs. about an hour it took me doing it "the old fashioned way." I'm a huge proponent of "Work smarter, not harder." Rounding over the pieces before gluing/screwing them into a rectangle would save a lot of time and work.
I'm sort of doing three things at once...trying to get as much work in while I can. Here's a sneak peek at another yet-to-be-created thread. I bought some lights for dance-area lighting. I bought pairs, as to have equal lighting on both my light stands. The LED washes I bought have a non-standard mounting bolt pattern, and don't line up with the existing mounting bolt/hole locations on the light stands...probably b/c they are intended to be wall-washes/uplighting and not stand-mounted washes. But they are more than bright enough for that. So I am "repurposing them." The mounting holes in the brackets are 41-3/8" apart, on-center, which didn't quite line up with the upper bar on my light stands. So I drilled new mounting holes for the brackets. More pics of it all lit up later...someday soon. For now, just some pics.


Looking down on the bars, the two innermost bolts are the stock locations. There are two more corresponding holes (barely visible in pic) towards the ends. I wanted the LED bars facing/mounted on the front of the bar, so I drilled two new holes. Those two new holes are where the bolts that attach the lights to the bars are located.

Hope to have a few pics of the facade later tonight. I am planning on 3 coats of rolled primer on the fronts, then 2 sprayed coats on the fronts.