Titebond 3 is probably the most used glue for full length laminations.
Pro :
Its water proof,(other TB's are not )
long working time for a pva(not as long as epoxy or a urea formaldehyde glue)
Relatively cheap.
Cleans up with water.
Long shelf life.
Thin, virtually invisible glue line. Highly creep resistant ie not effected by changes in moisture content.
Con: TB3 has good heat resistance for a PVA, but is not resistant enough to reliably safe for heat treating, heat corrections after glue up.
TB3
Bow makers epoxy(not hardware epoxy)
Pro:
waterproof,
Very strong, esp good for gluing on handle risers with exposed joints eg dip area.( TB3 can lift in this area)
long shelf life
Long working time.
Con:
Messy clean up, need acetone.
Glue line is thicker, more noticeable than TB, but not necessarily ugly.
Formaldehyde glues Urac, Resorcinol.
Pro:
Very strong, very good at exposed joints lip dip/riser transition.
water proof
resin/hardener versions have a long working life.(unibond powder, plus water will go off much quicker especially when hot as mentioned in earlier posts).
Glue line highly resistant to heat, minor heat corrections are safe, with cured glue.
Con:
Short shelf life, months rather than years. (you can keep it in the fridge to extend its life)
Expensive
Harder to find in small quantities, as epoxies have replaced these glues in many industries.
Hard to clean up, need acetone.
Can dry with very sharp blade like dags of glue that can cut you and are very rough on edged tools.
Thick glue line, also very obvious with resorcinol which has a dark purple colour to it, may not be to some peoples liking.