Since I was using a 12VDC to 120VAC 130-watt inverter, i could use an AC bulb. At Home Depot I found 5 13-watt fluorescent bulbs for $9.99.
These will work with a cheap square-wave inverter (unlike fluorescent tubes!) and are very bright for the wattage. 13 watts fluorescent = 60 watts incandescent. 23 watts fluorescent = 100 watts incandescent.
Next step was designing a protector for the little curlique light bulb. I found that either the 13 watt or 23 watt would fit into a 1 quart Mason jar with a 3" mouth. I could put the jar lid in the jar ring and screw the lid to the wall. Actually, I got a piece of 1/8" aluminum, cut it the diameter of the inside of the jar ring, and filed down the thickness so the aluminum fit neatly onto the jar ring. I bolted the aluminum to the wall, which also stopped the jar ring from turning. Next step was to make holes through the aluminum top and the wall, add rubber grommets, and run the wires through the wall to the inverter and a wall switch.
The Mason Jar dome light is attached on the wall over the front closet. I've got the height of the jar lid up enough that the side of the jar touches the ceiling. The jar screws on for a friction fit. It's a tight screw-on that really protects the fragile little bulb. Also looks rustic, rustic, rustic! My East Texas horse-riding friends like it a lot. And it's bright enough to read stock quotations from the newspaper at night. The bulb doesn't run as hot as an incandescent light, and you can put your finger on the lighted bulb without getting burned. The bulbs last something like 2,000 hours.
FYI, if you're running a 12 VDC system only, check the camping department in Wal-Mart for a 12-volt version of this fluorescent bulb.
In the Gyroguy personal album, I have a partial picture of this lighting fixture in the Crocodile Tear. Look for the dome light/vent photo. BTW, the black thing on the bottom of the vent is a 25 CFM computer fan.
If you want a bright, simple, cheap, durable (and rustic!) dome light, consider this one.