Next set of pics shows some detail of the mounting of the LEDs for the light-up faceplate.
If you noticed the overhead shot of the preamp chassis above, the faceplate is clear acrylic, 1/8" thick. It is engraved on the side against the metal chassis, in reverse.
I downloaded Inkscape (a free drawing package) to lay out the control holes locations and the font/position of letters/numbers. I'd already figured out the control spacing as part of the mechanical layout planning for the build. I was able to flip the image after getting everything positioned the way I wanted, and saved in a format acceptable to the engraving shop that did the panel for me. They used their laser to cut the control holes.
The LEDs are positioned along the right edge of the control panel.
It might look slapped together disassembled, but I put a layer of electrical tap on the chassis just beyond the edge of the panel, then have the LEDs laying against the edge of the panel, and another layer of tape over the whole package. If I were going to make this into a production amp, I'd have to figure out a prettier packaging/mounting method, or find a way to encase the whole package. But the amp is for me, and no one sees the tape unless the amp is disassembled.
The two squares to the right, above and below the chassis mounting hole are rubber squares which keep the LEDs from backing away from the panel edge. I made those by building up layers of a rubber tape until they were about 1/8" tall (same as the control panel).
I took 6 ultra bright blue LEDs and filed 2 opposing sides, on the same plane as the leads, until the LED was 1/8" thick in that direction. The I filed the rounded bulb of the LED to take off much of the bulk in that direction and give a generally flat surface to fit against the control panel edge.
The end LED package is 6 LEDs, which the leads connected in parallel. A little bit of insulation stripped off other wires I used during the build insulates the + and - leads as they daisy-chain between each LED.
There is a hole that looks black and part of the upper rubber backing square where the wires for the LEDs exits the chassis. I attached the wires to the last of the LEDs closest to that hole and added a bit of heatshrink to protect those wires where they pass through the hole in the chassis. Inside the chassis, this twisted pair runs to 6.3v + and - terminals on the power XLR jack, with a dropping resistor in series with one of those wires. I found the resistor value not critical for LED brightness.
The original Standel had pilot light bulbs at either end of the control panel to make it light up, but I was concerned about putting 6.3vac wiring near the input jack so I lit my panel from only one side. If you're looking for it and in a dark room you can tell the side by the power switch is a little brighter than the input jack side, but it's probably not a big enough difference to warrant adding a pack of LEDs to the other side of the panel.