I have shot a bow exactly once in my life. It was my aunt's compound bow and I was 11 years old. That was 12 years ago and I haven't touched a bow since then. I am worse than a novice at shooting a bow.
I recently met a co-worker - who is practically a luddite, dude refuses to get a cell phone - and he told me about how he makes bows as a hobby. It inspired me to look into how bows are made and when i discovered that it doesn't actually require too many tools to get started i decided i'd give it a try.
I don't have any tools except a hammer and drill -which are my housemates - and I don't do woodwork often and the last time I really made something from wood completely from scratch was in woodshop in 8th grade - made a barn owl house and some small other things. But I don't have a collection of tools by any means and I am very cautious about where i spend my money.
I went out and purchased
some red oak today from home depot, sorted through about 30 planks and this was the Golden boy of the lot - straightest grain I could find and it's not warped. Went and got some clamps from harbor freight. And my Amazon package with tightbond III, a cheapo coping saw (doubt I will need it), and my
9" Shinto rasp should be arriving later today.
Still need some files and sandpaper but this should get me started on the build. And i have no idea where to buy bow strings from for tillering and eventually using the bow. Luckily I have some old Douglass fir 2x4s laying in the garage I can build a tillering tree with.
I'll be following
Sam Harper's PoorFolkBows Red Oak build along. I wanted to follow the
TradGang "So you wanna build a bow" pyramid bow build along because the shape of the bow is much more aesthetic (the hourglass figure on the handle, see page 3 of the thread) but I'm trying to stay on a budget and the 3/4 x 4 inch boards were 5 bucks a foot vs the 3/4x1.5inch ones which were $1.43 /ft. Maybe next time
Using this thread to track my progress and to get advice - all advice is welcome!
P.S. if anyone lives in the Bay Area and could offer in-person help (or tips on finding free wood) I would very much appreciate any mentoring!