I built the bow in the image in my garage from Maple, Bloodwood, Bamboo, and Fiberglass. I cut and ground the laminations myself using a makeshift thickness grinder that I built out of a cheap belt sander. It’s 48” in length (basically a knock-off of the Bear Archery SuperMag 48, which I wanted to buy, but is almost always on backorder). It pulls 60 lbs at a 28” draw.

I’ve grown disillusioned with my field of study (which very coding heavy) and have found myself retreating to this hobby more and more just to feel human. I’m considering trying to lay the groundwork to build a business out of it in the next few years; probably a sole proprietorship that could potentially evolve into a co-op of sorts, with equal pay and collective ownership (something that I don’t think exists at all in the archery community, as of yet). I have absolutely no interest in becoming a “small business tyrant” — this would be strictly for the love of the craft and to help feed my family. In addition to building bows, I would also love to host workshops to teach the art, as I’m fully confident that it’s something that almost anyone can do, given enough patience, guidance, and resourcefulness.

If anyone has any sources to recommend for doing such a thing, advice is very much welcome. I’m going in blind, so even some sort of one-size-fits-all, “Co-Op Building For Dummies” sort of thing would be of help. I don’t envision myself getting anything off the ground for at least a several years.

Anyway, thanks for coming to my TedTalk.

  • Multihedra [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    This looks incredibly nice!

    I assume the woods have material properties that determined what wood was used and how, or was it to some extent aesthetic choices?