Anything up to and including cut it up and burn it is welcome. OK, it is my first stab at building a tri lam. I briefly described it in a thread I had started a while back. 1/8" hickory back, 3/32" elm core, and 3/16" maple belly. I did not have a sled (just ordered one from Kenny, so that will be fixed), so nothing is tapered. It glued up nicely, I cut the shape, glued on the riser, then put it on my tree. I realized it was bending near the riser, but nowhere else. BMorv was kind enough to advise making the fades longer, and trying to put a taper on after the fact, to save something out of it. I tried to make the fades sweep a bit further, then decided that cutting the outer limbs narrower would make them weaker, and perhaps bend better. But, after carefully cutting, trying to keep the tapers equal, the limbs no longer are even when you look at the profile. Off by a little over half an inch. I'm sure that's not a good thing. Is it possible to save this thing? Any suggestions? Thanks!
(the first pic is off the form, the next is after all the butchery.)