OK, here are the jig pictures. This first image is the bending jig made from a couple of scraps of 1/4" plate and two cut off 1/2" bolts.
These next pix show how the rod is bent. The jig is held in a large vise. The rod is marked at the beginning of the bend and heated with a Mapp gas torch until red, then bent 90 degrees around the rightmost pin, then dunked to cool it off. It is then put into the jig again with the first bend around the leftmost pin, the beginning of the second bend is marked, it is taken from the jig and heated to red again and then returned to the jig and bent 90 degrees.
All heating is done only in the area of the actual bend or the bend does not stay tight to the pin.
It is then dunked again and sawed off the long piece (this has already been done to the piece in the pic.) We make all the pieces and then move to the welding table. The flat pieces have already been made on the milling machine. One hole for the handle and one for the bolt are drilled in each piece. The welding jig is a large scrap of steel with two holes for locating pins and the side milled out to hold the handle piece in position.
The piece of scrap sticking out in the middle is a field expedient spring (it is slightly bent) that holds the handle down tight (it compensates for a mistake made in milling the width of the cross-wise slot.) The width of the wide T locates the handle side-to-side. The two pins are loose (can be tapped out, not floppy loose) so the welded part can be removed from the jig relatively easily. In the next picture, the weld zone is indicated by the arc of green paint.
(The handle used for this demo is a reject which is a little too wide, which is why the left hand rectangle above is not square. It could have been made square by tapping the handle against the jig after tapping out the right locating pin, but then the holes going through the mount would have needed a little tweeking.)
Any way, weld all the parts with a TIG welder with no filler rod. Flip them over and scribe the outline of the finished shape on each flat piece and attack with a disk sander until all the steel that is not a Coehorn handle is gone. (-: