Don – I would encourage you to get maybe 3 or 4 staves, rough cut them to size, let them dry, and start making bows. You’ll get a quick education about all the stuff discussed on this site - moisture content, mass weight, limb profiles, tillering, etc. Then start building your stave inventory. It would be a shame to cut down two or three dozen staves and find out they’re too thin, too narrow, or too short for the bows you’re wanting to build.
Steve – The dimensions in this chart are primarily based on staves from 6” to 14” trees. I’ve used the same dimensions for drying saplings too. The jury is still out on that one because several splits reflexed and/or twisted way too far while drying. The ones that were usable for bows had very good floor tiller profiles.
I haven’t made a lot of board bows with handles – about 12, and only a third of them survived. Big lesson for me: You can’t make a Bois d’Arc bow out of a red oak board! However, I have two pyramid flat bows (67” ntn) and two typical flat bows (66” ntn) made from 3/4” boards that have final tapers that match those in the chart, 3/16” and 1/4” respectively. All four are hunting weight bows.