Laminated bows are a whole different ball of wax from self bows. There are a number of vendors here who supply the requisite wood and fiberglass lams, epoxy, etc. BinghamProjects.com also has forms, kits, and all sort of other goodies.
There are some calculations/dimensions that you have to "get right" if you want the bow(s) you make to come out not too weak and not too strong. Type of wood isn't very important, but the "stack height" or thickness of wood and fiberglass is the critical dimension to making a bow come out right.
You don't need a fancy air-pressure form or bow oven or stuff like that until you've mastered the techniques. You can make perfectly good forms for "longbows" and recurves from a straight length of 2x10, some 1/4" dowel, a bicycle innertube, and some masking tape:
Here's my most recent bow just as I took it off of the 2x10 form:
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And here's the finished bow, 44" t-t-t:
Here's a 58", 53# draw flatbow I made awhile back, and its 2x2 form: