Gentlemen, Its good to see a lot of old names still active on here. I doubt that anyone probably recognizes me, but I was active for a time maybe 6 years ago or so. Back then I built a lot of recurves and RD longbows, both youth and adult size. Not that I ever built enough so Kenny's finances hurt when my oven went in storage, but I built enough to keep family and friends well armed. Life though, being what life is, changed direction for me a bit and I have not built a bow since.
Anyway, I hope Y'all don't mind lending your advise to a free loading deserter, because I am about to jump back in to uncharted waters here...
On to it, I guess, the build is for a friend of my wife, Krista. Krista is 5'2"and might weigh 110 with her pockets full of nickles. She is also known to attend every renascence festival in driving distance dawned with full regalia as some kind of sexy mid evil or mythological character, which informs the rather unique objective for this project...
Krista wants me to produce a bow that looks as close as possible to an English long bow, but with the benefits of modern materials and as much performance as I can squeeze from it. She also wants a shelf, so of course a Hill style becomes the base in my mind.
I seem to recall that the general rule for English long bows was that the bow should be as tall as the archer, so that starts us off at 62" Our target weight will be 20# at 25" I intend to keep it slim and delicate with 1" wide limbs at the fade. From the aesthetics point of view, I'd love to make it with 100% Osage or Yew core (assuming I could find Yew lams) with a very short (12"max) riser, and of course clear glass back and belly.
Now here are the problems that I anticipate and hope Y'all might have solutions for.
First, a bow that long with a super short riser, that short a draw and low a draw weight seems destine to be sluggish at best. I'm envisioning this being so whippy that the extra weight of tip wedges might even hurt more than they help. Is my concern here misplaced? If not, how would you address it? Sacrificing aesthetics for performance (IE:shortening) IS an option here, if that will produce the best result.
Osage and Yew, though they would look right also have issues. I don't even know if I could find Yew, but that would make for a deep limb, I think. Too deep for a limb thats 1" at the fades and 1/2" at the tips? I assume the weight of 100% Osage would add to the sluggishness of already long weak limbs? What is a good performing alternative core wood that I could stain to look like a plain stick bow? I'm not 100% against something like boo core with veneers either, so that is an option too.
And of course where ever we land on this in the end I will need help with layup schedule.
So what say you? Is my concern misguided, or what sacrifices need to be made?
Thank you,
Steve