You're not making it easy on yourself, but those logs should yield a bow or two. It is REALLY annoying you've removed the bark. You should only remove the bark if the pith (the heart, the center of the log) is also removed. NEVER remove bark from a round log, unless you tke the stave down to the pith! Myself, I do not remove the bark at all on yew. Only once it is nearly dry.
With the smaller log, you can only get one bow. Remove wood from it AS SOON AS YOU CAN! Preferably today, but if that's not possible, tomorrow. In the meantime, store the wood in the wettest place you can think off. Probably outside in the rain, away from the sun and wind. If you put this round debarked stave in the wind and sun, it will literally crack to pieces within hours. Pick the cleanest side of the log as your back. Remove sapwood and some heartwood from the opposing side.
The bigger log could yield two bows. But the spiral twist scares me a bit. It appears to have some pretty severe twist in it, about mid way up. You should not split this log in two; that will yield two useless half logs. Instead, use a band saw to cut it in two equal pieces. Cut straight through the worst knots, picking the cleanest sides as the back of the bows.
Sealing the sapwood backs with something like shellac (a sort of varnish; google it) is certainly a wise thing to do.
Both appear to be limbs, rather than trunks. Correct? Just to get things straight here.