This is probably an anomaly but I was still in my recurve mentality when I made my second osage bow. The first was a sinew backed board that was very poorly made and blew up after 30 shots.
Not knowing it couldn't be done, next I decided to make a working recurve. This was 20 years ago but I am pretty sure I copied the limb arc from a set of bighorn limbs and steamed in the curves. I used a flawless piece of osage.
I made a bow around 60# with full working recurve limbs, I shot it for a while, even placed in the TN indoor 3D archery tournament in Nashville with it.
After I made a few more osage bows I retillered it down to my wife's poundage so she could give up wheels and start shooting a selfbow, she shot it for a year or so. The recurves never pulled out, unfortunately I never took a picture of it.
I took it to a local Renaissance Fair to show it to the resident longbow maker named Mike Twaddle to see what he thought as he had over 300 longbows under his belt. He looked at me quizzically and asked "you made this, it was your first working bow"? I didn't know I had done something out of the ordinary. He shot it and told me I would go far as a bow maker.
After I made my wife another bow more suited to her I gave the recurve to a nephew who probably still has it today, it never broke as far as I know.