You guys are fast! Thanks for all the replies so far, and for making me feel welcome. I guess all folks "primitive" are generally good people. I shoot and build a few flintlocks and make primitive knives, and the folks involved in those arts are the same way.
The bow does not have any visible glass in it -- looks like two distinct laminations of wood. I'm not real adept with computers, so I'm not sure how to load photos here, but sounds like you're picturing what I'm talking about with the twist. I can try heat -- I have a heat gun and can control it pretty well.
How do I know when I'm getting too hot short of watching the limbs come apart? Almost too hot to touch, or considerably less? Do I do one limb at a time, or the whole deal? And maybe more importantly, do I finish the bow (sand, stain, shape final contours) first; will that effect the twist either way? Or do I attempt to get the majority of the twist out first, and then do the rest?
One last thing, if I may: is there a tutorial somewhere on backing with snake skins? I've tanned all the copperheads that choose death on my farm, and think that could dress the bow up some.
Thanks again,
Scott