Some of you brought an interesting discussion:
Should the front profile match with the side profile?
IMO yes, but it is no dogma.
Here are my thoughts:
When we build a bow, we make it only that long as necessary to save limb mass. To make it as short as possible we should get all parts of the limb working (= bending). Bending wood means getting stress on belly and back. Of course it is the best to spread the stress all over the limb from tip to handle and also sideways from one edge to the other. The best design is to get equal stress on each wood cell, but the farther you come away from the neutral plane, the stress you get (increasing exponentially). In other words: the goal is to minimize set/stringfollow.
Of course you can make a bow with parallel limbs, or even with an inverse side taper as Del (
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,45989.0.html) made. You can get bending these experiments quite fine, but ….
you will get bows with very narrow parts near the handle
narrow limb causes thicker limb
thicker limb = more stress
more stress = more set in these parts
To get set here near the handle is the worst thing, because the effect on the whole bow is the strongest.
Hope I could explain that with my crude English.
Thanks all for your input!