I made these arrows up for a friend. They are 31" long and have a spline weight of 35 to 40 pounds. He is recovering from shoulder surgery and this seems to be a size and weight that he can shoot.
I turned the shafts from Poplar. The arrows are two fletched. The paint pattern is copied from a Creek arrow in the Oklahoma Historic Society museum as shown in Jim Hamm's "Encyclopedia of Native American Bows, Arrows and Quivers". The shafts were sanded with 220 grit, boned, shellacked, sanded again and then brush painted with acrylic paint.
The arrows have a 125 grain field point. The feathers and self-nock are reinforced with black cotton button thread glued with hot hide glue. The feathers are fastened with fletching tape. The white feathers were bought. The natural turkey feathers were given to me by some of my Turkey hunting friends.
The arrows arrived safely and the new owner had a chance to shoot them from 25 yards before he got too cold and had to go back inside.