An old name but under a new badge.

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dwardo

Bushcrafter through and through
Aug 30, 2006
6,455
477
46
Nr Chester
Hi all,

Just me but with a new badge of "Maker plus" :)

I guess a lot of the regulars on here know that i have been making bows for quite a few years now and due to my "working from home" I have been able to dedicate 4 or 5 hours a day pretty much every day to the task of becoming a bowyer.
I am a bit of a realist so I know that bowyery full time is like most traditional trades out there and is never going to make me any money but I think I can support my wood worrying habbits if I have a real job that pays the bills too :eek:
I have been making bows for friends and member of the local bow clubs for a long time and over the past 18 months I have started to take commisions which i enjoy no-end.
I love to have the new owner of a bow along with me for the whole project, from felling the tree to the finished bow. I like the owner to have input in the design, style, type and finish, aswell as the usual draw weight and length specs. Truth be told i have no taste at all when it comes to anything! Just ask my missus, she says unless my bum gets cold i wont consider buying a new pair of pants :approve: Shabby sheek she calls it!

I put a hell of a lot of soul, effort and time into all the bows i make and a little bit of my self if i am honest. By the time it comes to let one go i get pretty gutted and wish i could keep them all for my self but unless i let them go i never progress, that and i have far too many i never shoot as it is, if truth be told i prefer making than shooting.

So the bows them selves, I only ever use wood that i have sourced my self which is either from arborists, forestry workers or friends i am lucky to have with private woodlands. This is for two reasons, first off i dont like shipping woods from half way around the world to make a "traditional bow" and two, being a control freak i need to control the wood from green to seasoned my self so that i know it is in perfect condition.
I only use hand tools all the way with the only exception being a hot air gun if a heat treat is needed or for recurves when a fire is impractical and if the arborist or friend has used a chainsaw to fell the tree which is their choice. I split, shape and finish all with manual trditional tools, some of which are over a 100 years old. Not only does this process tell me more about the indiviual character and grain of the wood which cannot be gotten with power tools but it also keeps me intouch with the materials. That and power tools scare me to death and wake the baby :rolleyes:

All of the bows i currently make are what are known as "Selfbows" This means the bow is made from one single piece of wood, no glue ups no laminates and no machined lumber. The bows back (faces away from the archer) is usualy the original tree just under the bark. This type of bow I beleive is the most pure traditional form of bowyery. You listen to the wood or the bow fails, you dont tell the wood what to do and glue it into a shape or stick two bits together in a bow shape with glue. If i do ever "back" a bow it will be with either raw natural silk or sinew. This is either for simple asthetics or to add insurance against a bow break. I recently estimated that there is aproximately 30-40 hours in each bow i make. If you were to make a commision you will get weekly reports with photos of each stage of work so that i can get your opinion on style and finish so that you have an input in your finished bow.

One regret i have is not photographing a lot of my previous work but i do have a few pictures from a bow that has just been finished for a member here and a few others from previous commisions.

So thats it i am out the closet as a member who is looking for commisions for anything from English longbow designs to short flat recurves for hunting or target archery. One thing i can guarentee is that no one else will have a bow like yours and in regards to performance they are up there with modern glass recurve bows. So please enquire if its something you are looking for via PM. My bows start from about £150 upwards which equates to about £4 per hour without the cost of materials lol but i love it.

Here is a bow just finished for Cromm an archer from this forum

This is a cherry bow, about 50lbs@28 silk backed light recurve 59.5 inches long, antler overlays

P7100011.jpg

P7100025.jpg

P7100014.jpg

P7100012.jpg

P7100021.jpg


A few previous bows and recent commisions.
P4270001.jpg

P4270016.jpg

P1010016.jpg

standing-1.jpg

brace1.jpg

DSC01568.jpg

standing.jpg

tiptoms.jpg

IMAG0480.jpg

IMAG0493.jpg



Thanks for looking all and thanks for all of your support over the years of bending wood.

Leon.
 
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Paul_B

Bushcrafter through and through
Jul 14, 2008
6,203
1,569
Cumbria
You sir are an artist!

Wish I had the money for one. Used to live near Blackburn where the Salmesbury longbow club was based. Always regretted not taking advantage as it was a good club. Only used GF cheapo bows and one three piece wooden one when at Uni. Did consider getting into it but no decent club near to me and not got the money for newhobbies.

Wish you well in your craft.
 

dwardo

Bushcrafter through and through
Aug 30, 2006
6,455
477
46
Nr Chester
You sir are an artist!

Wish I had the money for one. Used to live near Blackburn where the Salmesbury longbow club was based. Always regretted not taking advantage as it was a good club. Only used GF cheapo bows and one three piece wooden one when at Uni. Did consider getting into it but no decent club near to me and not got the money for newhobbies.

Wish you well in your craft.

Very kind of you to say so. Yeah I hear you on the cash front but we live in hope! Wish i could afford to keep these my self or i would just "lose" them in the post after the commision lol ;)
 

mark

Forager
Dec 26, 2007
125
3
57
Stirlingshire
I am always amazed by the skills people on BCUK have. Those are fantastic, wish I had somewhere to use one of these as I'd seriously consider one, as it is, it would most likely end up as an ornament which would not do it justice.
 

Andy BB

Full Member
Apr 19, 2010
3,290
1
Hampshire
Hmmm - I have a cheapo longbow in the garage I bought in Cork 46 years ago and haven't touched in 45. Wonder if it is any good now? Might need a new string thingy........:)
 

dwardo

Bushcrafter through and through
Aug 30, 2006
6,455
477
46
Nr Chester
Oh now why did you have to go and do that... I'd just made my mind up to get a bamboo laminate and now I need to have another long hard think....

Sorry :) A boo backed bow does make for a quick stable bow if your after a composite bow. If you fancy something different and you have the time to see a bow built for you then please get in touch.

Hmmm - I have a cheapo longbow in the garage I bought in Cork 46 years ago and haven't touched in 45. Wonder if it is any good now? Might need a new string thingy........:)

Get it down to your local archery shop if you have one. They should help you with a string and check the bow over before bracing and drawing it. Good luck. :)
 

Corso

Full Member
Aug 13, 2007
5,252
449
none
now this has sparked my interest :D

been looking at short flat recurves as an option for a while - do you make them with arrow rests? How compact do you go - i was looking at something approx 50" in lengh with a shortish draw at about 35-40lbs
 

dwardo

Bushcrafter through and through
Aug 30, 2006
6,455
477
46
Nr Chester
now this has sparked my interest :D

been looking at short flat recurves as an option for a while - do you make them with arrow rests? How compact do you go - i was looking at something approx 50" in lengh with a shortish draw at about 35-40lbs

Poundage isnt a problem and if you work on the formula of 2xdrawlength plus the handle length if stiff. Then add a couple inch for safety :) So for around a 50inch bow, max draw would be 25 inch but you have to consider string angle killing performance and also string pinch. String pinch is why the very short horn/sinew bow cultures use a thumb release for comfort.
You also have to be very careful not to overdraw such a bow. For me at the minute 60 is short but still safe and comfortable at normal draws.
Soft arrow rests are easy enough as are small shelves added on, cut in shelves would be no good at that length.
 

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