It has been a great while since I have fiddled about with this classic bow style. I seem to remember doing a few about 15 years ago, including one of hickory that rattled fillings in my teeth loose, busted up a kidney stone, and bruised my left heel with it's rather excessive hand shock. But the other day I was in Antler, Hide, and Claw down in Custer and happened to come across a nice pair of deer antler tips that are about the right size for making tips, so...
I think I will shoot for a nice, comfortable 45 lb draw at 28" and an overall length of 6 ft. The osage stave I am looking at does not have great thick rings, but the early/late ratio is not bad. It has a short back and forth snake in one limb, but I think I may pull out my Indian flute and charm it into straightening out some. Not much twist, and that is always easy enough to fix, too.
What say you, my merry band of mischievous bowyers? I want to stick to the classic lines, but I cannot find any of my books that detail the front profile. I seem to remember that they should not taper at first coming out of the handle area, but at some point on the limb begin a straight taper to the tips. And the classic dimensions are 5 parts depth of limb to width, right?