Submitted by monroegreen9 t3_111fn1w in DIY
I looked online and found nothing that addresses this issue I have observed when mounting new wall sconces to a standard plastic “old work” light box. Because the box sits proud of the drywall (instead of behind the drywall like “new work” boxes), the light fixture’s metal mounting plate is also proud of the drywall. And, because the light fixture is designed to sit exactly flush with the mounting plate, there is now a gap between the light and the wall, which is very frustrating. The plastic light box is 100% as far into the drywall as I can get it.
Photo: https://imgur.com/CajxggM
My guess is that wall sconces are designed with the assumption that the box is flush (I’ve tried two different ones already), so that the light will sit exactly flat against the drywall. But in my case, I have to use an old work light box to add these lights where there previously weren’t any…which is what all the videos tell you to use. What am I missing? It doesn’t seem like lights come with any kind of designation for different light boxes. Any insight would be invaluable, but at the end of the day I’m assuming I have to just find something to cover the gap.
ETA: the picture makes it look the light’s backplate is too small and doesn’t cover the box, but it does. It just doesn’t sit far back enough to hide it.
Zannanger t1_j8edbx8 wrote
Do your best, caulk the rest.