Yes Steve, that was before we knew much about heating up wood. We looked for natural reflex in staves to get the most of them. I'll see what I can find for pics. As Bob said, early 90's. Hacked one out in my basement with a Sawzall. It wasn't pretty but the hook was set. Met Bob (Chamookman) and Gary and I couldn't burn the shavings fast enough. The cool thing about the early 90's is that it was "pre-internet". A lot of trial, error and experimenting. There wasn't a whole lot out there. I started with Massey's "The Bowyer's Craft" then the Comstock's "Bent Stick".
Last year, I resurrected an osage bow that I built in 1995 for an elk hunt. It was 64 pounds at 26". As many of us, I was younger then. The bow had a knot hole in one limb which gave it character, but the knot's natural form deflexed the limb in that area. The other limb stood nice and straight. I narrowed the limbs a bit, put it on a form took the bend out at the knot and retillered to 45 pounds. It's now my go-to shooter which I'm very consistent and pretty darned accurate with.