As long as you learn from your mistakes(experiments) it is never a failure. I still push the envelope sometimes just to see what I can achieve and many times I am unsucessful. For me wood bow building is an experiment anyway. I push the limits just to see what will happen. I'll let anyone shoot my wood bows just to see how(and if) they will hold up. Some say I'm stupid for doing this but it is all part of the larger scheme; to see if they can take it...to see if I have the skill or stomach to justify the results. The ones that do make it are usually bullet proof. The ones that don't make it are studied for future reference. I very rarely throw a broken or failed bow away. d;^)
My point to the criticism is that I see folks showing off their new bows and all I get to see is the beautiful wood working skills, beautiful wood combos in sexy shapes and beautiful tip overlays. Very rarely do I get to see the actual workings of a new bow unless I ask for it. The back profile will dictate the tiller shape and the unbraced, braces and full draw pics show how well the bow was crafted and executed. To me, these things are more important than the glamour shot we normally get to see. They tell me nothing about the actual bow, just that the "bowyer" is an excellent wood worker.
Also, I see lots of boo backed hickory bows that are well build and well tillered but to offer a newbie a boo backed hickory glue up is a bow building crime.IMO This combo is something for a bowyer to work towards but to give it to someone that is unfamiliar with the materials and the processes just to make a quick dime goes against my grain. I'm more interested in helping folks learn our great hobby/craft and sport, learn the charactoristics of woods so they can be successful with it than I am at making money or boosting my ego. Choosing wood for its working properties is more important than wood choices for their beauty...and there are excellent, appropriate wood choices that are beautiful as well as appropriate.
Sorry for my rant but this is one on my bow building pet peeves. Too many folks today care more about how good something looks than how well it works.