Well - I'm finally back to making progress with the help of an extremely generous gift. I received a couple of awesome bend-through osage short bows from Rich/Half Eye a couple of days ago. Unfortunately I haven't been able to put more than a few shots through them yet, but they've been fantastic examples for my current project. A couple of takeaways I've gotten already:
1. My current project is quite a bit over-built. I've already began narrowing it some. In the previous pics there was a knot just off mid-bow that I'd left space around. After seeing just how thin Rich's bows were, I had plenty of confidence to just remove it altogether and create a slightly narrower handle-section. Here's a pic (handle still a little rough but you get the idea):
2. It kinda blew my mind how thin the pin knocks could be with osage. While it doesn't apply directly to my current project (I'm using side knocks), it did tell me that I could stop being such a conservative weeny with how deep to cut my knocks.
So anyway - I cannot express how grateful I am for such a generous gesture. Not only will it give me a quick way to get my wife shooting some arrows with me, but it's also helping me a ton with my understanding of bow design. Thanks again Rich!
I'm not sure this last pic is very helpful, but it just shows that I have a little bit more flip in my tips than the fine examples I received. I'm hoping those will help to give me a little more ability to pull some draw length. I'm already fairly certain my wider limbs will be able to handle it - my understanding is that my design bottleneck (because it's so short) is going to be string angle/keeping the string on at draw. Am I on the right track here that slightly more recurve will help me with that? I'm still not going to go nuts with the draw length, but I thought it might be a helpful feature assuming I don't pull them out with set.