You can use a z-splice to splice two boards together, but that will shorten your bow a little. I make my z-splices 4", which means the over all length will be shortened by 2". So if my boards are 72" together, that will leave me with 70" after the z-splice.
But I like to put the z-splice in the thickest part of the handle, not where the arrow shelf is going to be. That requires me to off set the center of the splice by about 1", effectively shortening my board a little more. Does that make sense?
So the center of my bow will be about 1" from the center of the z-splice. That makes the shorter end of the bow 34" and the longer end 36". To make that the new center of my bow, I cut two inches off the longer end, leaving me with 68".
That's about perfect for a 66" bow because I'll cut my nocks one inch from each end.
If you keep the whole board in tact like that instead of cutting out laminations, just taper from about where the fades are going to be down to the ends. I haven't made one in a while, but I think my ends were 3/8" or 1/4" or thereabouts. And I leave them 1.25" wide.
From there, you can tiller to whatever weight you want.
An alternative is to do what you showed in your picture. Cut the boards into laminations, and do butt splices like you showed in your picture. I would do an over all 0.002 in/in taper. You can do that by cutting three laminations, keeping one parallel, and making the other two 0.001 in/in each. Put the thick parallel lamination on the belly of the bow. That will give you some room to tiller.
You ought to do something to keep your handle from popping off, too. There's a couple of ways you can do that. You can either glue a 20 inch or so "power lam" under the handle between the bamboo backing and the first core lamination, making it tapered on both ends, or you can run your belly lamination up the fades of your riser as if it were a glass lam bow.
Check out the pictures on the bottom of this page to see what I'm talking about:
http://poorfolkbows.com/ipe1.htm