I'm with Gordon, go with billets every time. Full length stave's for full length bows. I buy my sleeves from flybow, because I live in Europe. Threerivers archery do them too. I always go for the small version of the sleeve as I use dense wood like Laburnum or Yew, Osage would be a small sleeve for me to. I have used the big sleeve but I didn't like it, so now only go with small. Because I don't buy my wood (i barter and triad for it) the sleeve is the most significant outlay 30ish euros, I try to get both billets actually looking like bow limbs before I go ahead with the glue up. I shape and fit the sleeves first, then like I use a chalk line to see how we are looking, heat gun correction is simple enough on a billet. I get a nice even taper on the limbs and only when I am sure its going to be a bow I do the glue up, don't want to have to get them sleeves off- it If doesn't turn out! Once I have it all glued up, its simply a matter for the scrapper to bring it to a nice tiller. I personally think I'm going to move towards making more and more take downs. They are way easier to find the right length wood for, they are way more practical for transporting, the weight of the handle makes a natural damper reducing hand shock. I could go on, but you get the picture. I prefer to make ELB style crowned belly bows as take downs, just because the shape of the sleeve lends itself to this design and I'm hooked on them! Flatbow Osage take down sounds cool! I'm building a nice Yew ELB style take down at the mo, just glued her up, will post pics soon.