Once again thank you very much.
I was curious how did you set up that picture with the full, braced, and unbraced profile all in one?
OK, I will try to explain (I hope my English is good enough
)
To take the photographs it is the best you use a tripod, so that the frame will always be the same.
Let enough space around the bow, use manual focus and exposure (test it on the screen of your camera).
Choose a monochrome background, for example blue (like at the blue-screen-technic). If you have to take the photos indoors and have to use a flash, use it indirect. If this is impossible it is better to use a longer exposure time than a direct flash (tripod!)
Take the photos, unbraced, strung, and full draw, without any changes in exposure and frame.
Transfer the photos to your computer and open them with a image processing program like Adobe Photoshop (I am using an Apple computer and only Photoshop for my work, so I do not know the differences to other programs or windows)
Open the first photo, select the background of the picture (the blue one) an delete it. If everything worked right the bow is the only object now.
Open the second photo, select the background as well and reverse the selection. Now the bow should be selected (the only thing that is not blue). Copy it and paste it in the first photo.
Repeat this with the third photo.
Now do you have an picture with three layers.
In your programme should be the possibility to switch between these layers, activate them (so you will work only in the activated layer) and make them transparent.
So it is possible to orientate the layers.
After the layers are orientated make all the layers visible and you should have a complete overlapping picture.
To save it as an JPG, you have to assemble the different layers to one.
I hope that was understandable
?!