Can we hear more about the 1x2 wooden bow please? I'd be interested.
It's quite simple, and I take no credit whatsoever.
I got interested in making bows after seeing some handmade ones at a Renn Fair.
It had never occurred to me that a real working longbow could be made by hand... even though all of my native american history classes told me it was more than possible.
One of those mental blocks that you never knew existed until it gets lifted out of the way and the world opens up, ya know?
Anyways, I started looking around online for a beginner instruction on how to make one.
I found a site called Poor Folk Bows. It was a personal site of a guy who lived in an apartment and had a passion for making bows in the confined space he found himself in.
He had a full, step by step with pictures, instructional on how to select the right 1x2 of Red Oak, how to prepare it, cut it, align it, shave it, string it, and flex it.
By the end, I had a functioning "Red Oak board bow", from not much more than local hardware store lumber and a few hand tools, with a 28" draw length and ~35-38lbs of draw weight.
I was amazed!
I've since had great success making bows using the same method, but not applying the backing material, leaving beautiful full grained wood showing through.
I am in no way affiliated with this guy, but I recommend his site to anyone interested in bowyery. He was literally my "jumping off point" and I owe it all to him, and he'll likely never know.
Check it out:
How to make a red oak board bow
The site has many other instructional pages for other bow types, as well as other hobbies he has.
Edit:
Here are a few unfinished bows I've started using the above instructions as reference:
left to right:
72" unbacked Red Oak with multi-layer Poplar riser(now finished)
72" unbacked Red Oak with Cedar heartwood transition riser (now finished)
60" unbacked Red Oak with (I forget) riser(broke :frown

72" unbacked Pecan with Paduk riser (this one actually has a full taper to the riser)
80" unbacked African Mahogany with Lemonwood and Paduk riser (much larger because I'm not sure how well this wood will work)