Hi everyone.
This is the first bow I've built for this year, after about 9 months of doing any bow making at all, and it feels great to get back to making a bow.
The stave is red (I believe) elm from Connecticut, and was given to me by Jamie, at the 2007 primitive skills gathering, so it has been idle for about 20 months in my garage. It had significant reflex at both tips, and I was wondering how best to take advantage of the natural properties of the stave. I finally settled on another Holmegaard, one of my favorite styles of flat bows. I broke a few staves and boards trying to learn this style, and finally had some success with a maple Holmie I made last year, but it was way to tip heavy, although a really nice performer.
This time, I had no issues at all building it. No lifted splinters, for one thing, which happened mid limb on both limbs on the maple. Maybe I am better, or I was luckier, or the gods were smiling on me
I did go with a very low poundage bow, as I wanted a nice easy shooter to get better at hitting what I am aiming at. This bow came in around 40 lbs. at 27 inches draw. That I actually targeted that weight and it came out there is a nice feeling. I think that a well tillered and performing lighter bow is preferable to a heavier one that isnt as efficient, or fights you in one way or another.
It performs wonderfully. No hand shock at all, and very "zippy" (no, not the pinhead, but it spits out arrows with authority). I am really pleased overall with it, but am not quite finished with it. I may have to do some adjusting to the tiller, but want to avoid that if possible, to keep the weight at 40 lbs. It looks to me like the lower limb is bending closer to the inner handle fade, but that doesnt seem to bother me or the bow. What do you folks think?
For finish, I plan to keep it simple, in the spirit of our Neolithic ancestors. More sanding, keep what remains of the camdmium (spelling?) on the bow back, as it looks pretty cool, and then a simple finish (maybe True-Oil, have a bottle but have never used it before). I dont plan to make a leather handle, or stain or paint the wood. If I do any graphics on the bow, it will be a very simple design, maybe a spiral on each limb just above the handle on the back of the bow with red ocre. I am leaning toward no decorations.
Overall, I really am happy with this, and it has given me confidence for a planned Egyptian self bow and a hickory Mohawk recurve I am going to get started on soon. Tools used to make this were a small adz, draw knife, spoke shave (that tool really worked great with this wood), farrier's rasp, and then lots of time with a cabinate scraper. More photos will be posted once I finish the bow and am confident it is ready for critical eyes. I will also post specifications, length, all that stuff then too.
Dane