I wish I had this light when I remodeled my kitchen; I installed a bunch of recessed ceiling lights, but when I got to one corner of the room, a roof rafter blocked the space above the ceiling where a light was to go, and I had to break up the symmetry by relocating that one fixture. That wouldn’t be an issue with this Juno fixture, which doesn’t require a mounted electrical box, or much more than a 6-3/16” (16cm) hole in the ceiling and about an inch of clearance above that. 120V electrical cabling goes to junction box (1.25” x 5.25” x 3” – or 31mm x 132mm x 25mm) that can be flexibly placed in the above-ceiling space, and a pigtail then connects that to the LED lighting disc. The junction box also has a 5-position slider to adjust lighting temperature. The fixture comes with an insulating gasket that goes up against the ceiling, a cutout template, and an optional brushed metal trim ring if the integrated black trim ring doesn’t work with your design aesthetic. Integrated push-in quick connectors for hot, neutral, and ground each support two additional conductors (12-14 AWG), so these fixtures can be daisy-chained without problems. I found the light quality to be good, without perceptible flicker. It’s said to be dimmable down to 10%, though my installation did not make use of dimming. In lieu of printed instructions, Juno has stamped the back of the lighting wafer with a QR code that links to the documentation. I would have been happy with a plain white trim ring, but the supplied trim options dress-up the installation considerably. (I’m lighting up a finished storage crawl space beneath a stairway and couldn’t help but think that fancy trim was like wearing a bow tie to a picnic.)