Hello,
Hope everyone is good, checked out a lot of the work on here and the craftsmanship is something to behold..not too many postings as i've been working 2 halves of the same gnarled peice of hornbeam (Carpinus betulus), one is 53" the other 56" long, from a branch stave roughly 2.25" average. Anyone else worked this wood at this size? would be interesting to compare notes... =)
Got the shorter stave almost finished, strung, now tillering - this one's basically a flat almost D tillered bow with thin almost non-bending tips, which I should imagine will be coming out about 20 - 30lb max due to initial dimentions being so limiting however I think a backing would suit (I'm hoping to back with either rawhide or linen). The wood's a little uncompromising but feels very nice to work (especially with a rasp/scraper combo) - and the smell is great...
The other stave is an attempt to apply some holmegard design into things, but I dont have too much width left (1.5" top) and i want to leave the crown on as its going to be just sanded with inner bark left here and there. As a precaution I left enough room to correct and retiller for a D bow. Backing only if the other stave works.
Has anybody tillered a holmegaard without a stiff/raised handle? Is it possible to tiller a d bow with holmegaard tips but a parallel belly? The problems I see might be with leverage from the stiff outers altering the tiller and making it inefficient, or maybe leverage concentrated in the missing handle area might snap. This is basically what I did with the other stave, ishi style short flat bow but with thin narrow almost unbending tips.
Just a quickie r.e. posting pics - is it copy/paste photobucket job??
Thanks for reading
PS how do you put quotes and stuff in your profile so they show up in small, mysterious looking texts at the bottom of each posting? its good xD
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