Here's how Ryan made this bow:i started off with a mulberry stave that had some deflex and figured it was a good opportunity to make a wide sweeping recurve.  i 
steamed the tips and put them in my "big recurve" form.  they took very well.  tillering was pretty tough on this one, it just wanted 
to fight!  but i got it down to where i am happy. i think the tiller is a bit off but it shoots very well.  no stack at all and absolutely no 
handshock. it is probably the best recurve i have made to date with the exception of coming in a little under weight at about 45# 
@ 26 inches.  its 62 inches overall so i didnt want to pike it, so i tempered the belly which in turn gave it beautiful grain highlights.  
so to match the grain i went for the "marbled" look with the grip. its deer skin that i dyed with homemade walnut stain.  it shoots 
really quick for being light and hit where you point it, i feel very confident that it would take a deer.  the tips are overlain with 
black walnut heartwood and the string is b-50 with bobcat hair silencers.  it is just whisper quiet and doesnt carry that normal 
recurve "sound".   i am proud of this one and hope you enjoy it.  thanks for looking- Ryan
Comments from folks who really liked this bow:-"beautiful bow.  I have a mullberry stave and now you've got me wanting to work with it. " -Ranger B
-"WOW!  Nice Ryan.  Very Nice. I like the way you set the tip overlay ( up high ) and extended the recurve."  -RidgeRunner
-"That really is an awesome bow. The tiller looks great and the unbraced profile is really gorgeous."  -GeorgeTsoukalas
-"Really really sweet looking bow!  Looks smooth and sleek.    Very nicely done!"  -Saw Filer
Sean writes this narrative:I had been looking at the West Coast bows in the Traditional Bowyer's Bible Vol 1, and wanted to try my hand at one. In my 
browsing and planning, I saw a bow that was about 54" long; this being about the normal length of my bows, I decided to go 
ahead and replicate that one. It was Oak, so I got a 1" by 3" Red Oak board and copied the front view as well as I could. This is what I ended up with. It has a 1-1/2" handle, swelling to 2-1/2" at the widest point. The tips are a little narrower than the original's, at about 3/4", and it 
was 56" before the recurves, 54-1/2" afterwards (the original was 54-1/4" long). The tips are the same style as the one in the 
book, as well as the recurves. The original had no handle wrapping, but I liked the look of a combination leather/cordage handle 
(also shown in TBB 1), so I added that as well as a stain to darken the wood, and finished it with Tung oil.
It pulls 60lb@25" and shoots a 700 grain arrow very fast, hard, and accurately.
PA Forum Members Really Liked This Bow:-"Really nice job on that bow.  The tiller looks spot on.  I like those nocks.  Sweet bow." -ricktrojanowski
-"Very well done, young man!!"  -adb
-"Wow!!! Dont think we can call you 1/2 primitive anymore...your all primitive . There aint nothin bad about this bow...how did 
you get that oak to take that bend?? OUTSTANDING!! Great work Sean!"  -koan
-"Very nicely executed Sean, you sure have a gift" -DanaM 
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