My hardwood supplier (or as my wife refers to him, my crack dealer) finally managed to get his hands on a really nice piece of osage orange. I don't know if it could be made into a bow, maybe if it was cut in two and then spliced, but I don't really care. It's a beautiful piece of wood. Rich color, REALLY heavy, and clearly cut from the vertical (you can see bits of bark on the corners, with nice grain.
I just like to look at it right now. I'm seriously thinking of just putting it in a glass box and rubbing it with a diaper once in a while.
See here:
I put the Lego bag in the shot because I wanted to make sure I had something to use as a color-key. The camera is junk, so I had to 'touch up' the images afterwards.
I noticed that there are other spiffy remnants in the shot as well (I've got so much junk laying around when I work that I don't even see it until I look at pictures). On the left, the large board with everything on top of it is hickory, with a plank of Douglas fir, a scrap of black walnut, and a pen blank of purple heart. Between them and the osage is a section of jatoba. That stuff is dense like you wouldn't believe.
On the right, there is a pile of half-worked bows. One is a hickory longbow, shaping up nicely. Another is my daughter's new future bow (as long as I don't mess it up, it's becoming a trend) which is butternut backed with a thin strip of hickory (which doubled or tripled the draw weight of the butternut). There is a really long piece of jatoba which I hope to back with hickory and make into a D-bow.
Laying on top of all that is my father's boyhood recurve bow, for which I'm making a new string. It's a laminate wood recurve, with a fiberglass backing (so not primitive), but it's very nice. Very old, too, you can tell from the handle wrap. The markings on the bow indicate that it's 47 pounds at 28 inches, and the bowyer named it "The Wolverine". I plan to restore the backing just to be safe and shoot it a bit more.
Sorry for the rambling, just excited about my new finds. Hope someone else enjoys this, too.