Black locust fumed flattie (No. 77)

This Black Locust has a nice even crown and a dead flat belly. The tips are flipped with steam and are tapering from the flat belly into a triangular cross section. The outers are stiff. On the back is rawhide, stained with 3 different colors and fading out towards the tips. The rawhide strips are cut not at the edge, but about ⅛” away from. This makes a nice side effect. The overlays are made from plum heartwood.

The almost finished bow with rawhide and overlays on was in the fuming pipe for five days. The final tillering on the belly brought out the fading effect.

I found a matching burgundy leather for the grip and made her a matching string.

A simple, proven design but a pleasure to shoot.

Specs:

64” ntn

54#/ 28”

1⅝” max width

500 gram mass

 

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6 Comments

Andrei, I use a homemade mixture of beeswax, true terpentine, dammar and carnauba wax. It belongs to the treatment whether you get a shiny or glossy result.
I have visited your interesting website – but clue of the language, haha.

Hey! I have a black locust stave of 64″ and the max width is 1½”. I’m aiming for 45# at 29″. I was wondering if you got chrysals on this bow of yours which has almost the same spec’s. I’ve heard 1½” width is too narrow for 64″ length. Curious about your thoughts on this 🙂

Hi Max, I don’t see big problems with your plan (assuming you have a straight or a flipped bow in mind). Make sharp fades to get a long working area in the limbs. The thing with BL is you have to work carefully and slow to prevent chrysals. Exercise the bow a lot during tillering and don’t overdraw.
And no, I have no chrysals on my BL bows 🙂

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