The time you're going to spend getting weight up to 10 pounds is time you could be making a bow intentionally 10 pounds heavier. Anything you do (other than sinew) is going to add stress to the bow and 10 pounds in weight gain may not all translate to kinetic energy (eg: shortening and flipping tips will cause additional set, etc). BTW, adding 10 pounds to a 25# bow is HUGE change... almost 50% of current weight!!
I did what you're trying on my second bow and wound up with an overstressed, fretted, and splintered bow that was otherwise fine before i decided not to leave well enough alone. Not saying it has to happen that way, but it easily can.
I guess it depends on your purpose. You want a 10# heavier bow..... make one!!! you want to experiment on a stave you don't mind potentially messing up... then experiment to learn how not to mess up using these other methods (sinew, backing, etc).
My 3 cents worth