I spent my lunch break today looking up the CE side of things. It seems that it is considered safe and professional to have a CE marking and all the conformity but it isn't necessarily a legal requirement
If you look at the majority of stuff on major web sites from the far east, it has never been certified, but still sold in the UK. Compliance comes down to 'are you willing to take the personal risk if something goes wrong'. The biggest seller on the internet shed responsibility by saying they are just a seller and could you ever find the manufacturer and prosecute?? NO CHANCE!!
It makes a complete farce of our approvals systems.
People regularly sell stuff which is not CE certified.
It's not about certification, it's about product safety. Is the product you are selling safe. How did you design it, how did you test it to show it's safe.
If you look at the Low Voltage Directive, the requirement is to show a product is safe according to the relevant standards using accredited test facilities or an equivalent. It is probably impossible to find equivalent test facility which is acceptable.
For my sins, I have created a technical file for a lamp which was supplied commercially, but it was for a LED wireless access point, which meant an additional standard, 60950.
I created the file in 2019, so there may be some changes to standards and your lamp has battery supply, so may include other standards.
IEC 60950-1 Information Technology equipment-Part 1 General requirements (Not for yours
)
IEC 60589-1 General requirements for the safety of luminaires
IEC 60598-2-4 Particular requirements-Section 4
ortable general purpose luminaires
EN 61140 Protection against electric shock-Common aspects for installation and equipment
EN 62560 Self ballasted LED lamps
Having a technical file will not get you out of any liability should things go wrong, but what it will do is focus your attention on things to attend to, like the lamp stability test on a 6 degree slope.
If you want to go down the self certification route, get in touch.