I don't know about you guys, but for me bowmaking (and other creative pursuits) is not just about scraping and bending wood. It's like a relationship between my creative imagination and the material.
As i start working on a piece, at first my imagination is in charge: i see the stick and the bow i want to make. For instance, i'm working on a holmegaard right now with some yew i found. I imagine it with a raised handle at the back, a heartwood growth ring on the limbs and tips, wide limbs, stiff tips, and a sturdy handle which does not bend. That's the basic. Then, i approach the wood.
Gradually, shaping the bow becomes give and take. I feel my creative energy cycling between me and the stave. Does anybody know what i am talking about? It's like there's a stream of information going back and forth, which has the result of giving me ideas and mental imagery which i then apply through the tools. The bond feels organic and spiritual to me.
Don't get me wrong: I'm not saying that i think the wood can think or talk! Haha. But the process of turning a fallen tree into a stave and then a bow is not all one-sided. I think it goes both ways, somehow.
Any thoughts?
radius