Those knots one the side are no prob at all. Once you are 90% done and start narrowing the last 1/3 of the limb a tad and tidying up the edges they'll all but disappear just leaving a hint of shaddow or figure.
It's lookin good to me. Just keep going slow and steady.
Once it's braced have another careful go over the sapwood checking for any minor marks, tidying up any gentle blends from one ring to the next and homing in on the final finish for the back. I always do it in stages as it would drive me nuts trying to get the back perfect before I started tillering.
I try to keep the heart/sap at least 50/50 so as you thin the tips you may need to thin the sap a tad (left limb?) I've seen some where they ended up all sap at the tip IMO that's just horrible.
If you are going to do horn nocks it's handy to leave the sap thick on the last 2-3" it can help avoid trying to get a flatish back into the round hole of the horn nock (It also allows you to angle the nock slightly towards the back of the bow... they look awful if they slope towards the archer)
The pic shows a bow I recently finished, there are 3 knots on the edge, one furthest from camea was plugged early at floor tiller and has been almost all rasped away as the belly was rounded. The one nearest camera just had superglue /dust massaged in regularly to keep it stable , the other tiny one by the plug I ignored.
You'll be pleasantly surprized how may problems end up on the floor as shavings and dust
BTW Your draw weight sounds very sensible. I was thinking it was an ELB at this point. Personally I'd go nearer 50# than 70# on that length and keep the grip as short as pos. I'd rather go ELB or wider primitive style with Yew... but then I know zip about American style 'longbows'.
If it's an ELB it won't have fades as such and don't waste any length on a long stiff handle, it's too short for an ELB really, if it's an American 'longbow' I pass
Del
(Some low viscosity superglue/dust on those pins might help stop 'em snagging the tools if you are worrying over 'em)