Hi everybody,
My name is Denis, I'm french and I'm 16 years old. I'm new here. I have started making my own bows 6 months ago. I made 7 bows but my 7th bow is the only one that didn't break. it works good now. My 7th bow is made from hazel wood and is 22 lbs at 28 inches. that's not a lot but it's my first bow that works then I'm proud of me
I will send some pictures of my bow tomorrow I think. I painted the back of it 3 weeks ago. I like it a lot. I started readinf the traditional bowyer's bible volume 1 1 week ago and I have some questions. pls answer my questions
if you really know the answers because I only want to know the real truth
My questions are about the part "CUTTING AND SEASONING WOOD" written by Ron Hardcastle.
Here are my questions: 1) Is it possible that an Osage orange wood is mostly composed of "latewood" (black) and that another Osage orange wood is mostly composed of "earlywood" (white) ? Or it's not possible and then Osage orange wood is always mostly composed of 1 kind of wood between "earlywood" and "latewood". For what I understood, Osage orange can be mostly composed of "latewood" and another Osage orange wood can be mostly composed of "earlywood".
2) Are all of these woods Osage Orange wood or they aren't the same wood ? (look at the picture and the caption below) (I want to be sure but for me all of these woods are Osage Orange).
(look at the picture that is attach to this topic, bellow I think)
3) Is it possible that Coniferous wood is mostly composed of "latewood" (black) and that another Coniferous wood is mostly composed of "earlywood" (white) ? Or it's not possible and then Coniferous wood is always mostly composed of 1 kind of wood between "earlywood" and "latewood". (same question like the first one but for Coniferous woods).
4) Ron said this: "Understand the significance of the above; in ring-porous hardwoods, latewood is the virtuous, dense material of which toxophilic dreams are made. It contains those special fiber cells which give the wood its springiness. In a word, latewood is "good" stuff. Earlywood, on the other hand, is, for a bow-maker, almost without virtue. It is weak, treacherous, has no springiness, and if exposed improperly on the back of a self bow can spell doom for the weapon." after he said "The better logs and staves will have thinner earlywood and wider, denser latewood. In other words, the less total additive earlywood, and the more total additive latewood in your stave, the better the wood and the better the bow will be."
Does that mean that it's better to have more "latewood" than "earlywood" for ring-porous hardwoods ?
5) Ron also said this before: "Coniferous woods such as yew grow in the same earlywood-latewood pattern as the ring-porous trees, such as Osage and hickory, but there is a significant difference with regard to the earlywood. In yew and many other conifers the earlywood has some strength and integrity, unlike the worthless earlywood of ring-porous hardwoods."
If I understand well here the "earlywood" of Coniferous woods is better than the "earlywood" of ring-porous hardwoods, right ? and what wood is the best in Coniferous woods between "earlywood" and "latewood"?
I hope you understand everything well, if not feel free to tell me what you don't understand. That's difficult to explain. I hope that there are not a lot of mistakes as well.
Thank you very much
Best Regards,
Denis