Long time ago I made a 5 curve bow out of a pair of nice, snakey and very old osage sister billets. All curves were steamed in, except the central at the handle which was induced as a backset splice. The greyish brown color was already in the wood. That bow came out a bit long and felt sluggish, I wasnt really pleased with the result, so I put it away and it was laying in my rack for years.
Recently I decided to go ahead with that stick. I shortened each limb, cut away the handle splice, steamed in sharp statics instead of roundish working recurves, stiffened the levers with inserted horn wedges, steamed out the deflex into reflex, put on homemade td sleeves and retillered the bow. On lower limb the fade was too thin, I glued on a cut off from that bow.
The design of that bow had changed completely.
Now its a fine shooter without any shock and looks much better, at least for my eyes. Its now symmetrical, limbs have exact same length, ntn is 60. The handle is goat leather with an accent strip of stingray leather, arrow pass is also stingray. That bow is not dyed, this is the natural color.
Steaming out deflex
Piking
Tried the opposite angle, next time I go normal (steepest side of upper limb on the back) again
Lower limb got a glued on piece to match the sleeve
The stringray strip is sanded and gaps filled with white mineral pigment + glue