I do not understand most of what you said but the bow is elegant and really looks like a performer.
Chief, when you make a laminated bow, you either start with a backing, a handle/riser block, and a THICK belly lam (so you have enough thickness at the handle to form fadeouts, so the handle block won't flex and pop off), OR, you use a backing, a THINNER belly lam (less waste) and place a short lamination, tapered on both ends, between the backing and the belly. This sort of builds the middle up, stiffens it so it acts as a fadeout, and you can glue the handle block on. That has come to be called a "power lam". It's usually only about 1/8-3/16" thick, and tapers to paper thin gradually. It might be, say, 14" long if you plan on a 10" handle, and the handle is usually sloped into fades, too.
A full lam would just be another thin full length lamination between backing and belly lam, again to save expensive/hard to find belly wood, or just for looks.