Hi,
Not sure if anyone has had this thought or posted anywhere,...
Has anyone considered that the holmegaard artifact could be an unfinished bow? My theory is the shape could have been the result of a bow that was being worked holding the tip in the hand, removing wood towards said hand, thereby leaving a risen tip by the nature of the movement. I realised that when I was working in this way, I'd cut the nocks and was avoiding nicking them with the scraper. Ergo, a tipwards bulge on the belly. Maybe the bowyer was stopped short mid scrape and dropped it in a hurry...
Maybe the edges could have happened in the same way; after the bowyer perhaps observed a positive change in the bow after thinning the tips 'in general', again, if worked with scrapers (i used flint and cabinet scraper on the stave in question) whilst holding the tip braced along the legs in a sitting position, with the limb tip along the forearm or on the thigh then you see a gentle taper emerge, and a slight widening again as the scraper pressure lightens towards the end of the stroke.
I have a feeling that the bowyer was probably as skilled as any other at the time, yet perhaps had that little extra imagination and vision to change something in a way that was logical and productive. When I try to make a bow logic and productivity are like phantoms =) but then again I dont have to feed a family with one, so it allows for a certain amount of conjecture i guess;-).
What is certain for me, in my relatively short experience shaving sticks is that the search for tiller and function come solely (at the moment) from the demands of the piece of material to be worked, i.e the pattern of nature and structure in a potential stave instills the frame of mind, movement and physical dynamics that produce a functional, durable tool, or with a particularly imaginative bowyer, a work of art emerges (the artifact). For me the Holmegaard looks beautiful, like an unfinished, mildy informed happy accident by a sound, experienced bowyer who was looking in the right direction with clear vision...
regards
v