CroBows

The first Croatian bowmaking website

Bowmaking
Everything to do with making your own bow
Arrowmaking
You need something to shoot from that bow, right?
Everything else
Other odds-and-ends like tools, designs, jigs, etc.

My goal

To provide the best resource for aspiring bowyers

DIY friendly

I don't shy away from using power tools, but I also don't use any fancy equipment. I'm no proffesional bowmaker, so everything here is done in DIY style.

Hands-on

I do my best to try out everything I write about and give my own thoughts and experince on the matter, along with a dash of common sense.

A picture is worth...

Typing away till my fingers go numbs is all fine and dandy, but pictures are what bring the work to life and closer to you who's reading this.

Recent Articles

My Latest Bow News

Homemade (sort of) fiberglass bow

I was given a fiberglass bow-in-the-making and decided to show you guys how the assembly went. The only thing I know of it’s origin, really, is that it came from someone in Slovenia. It took me a few months to get it together and shooting since I was just doing it here and there.

The bow riser is made of cast aluminum and the three limbs I got are a fiberglass and resin composite, though I’m not sure of any details beyond that. Here’s a picture of how the limbs looked early on, although I did some sanding on them already:

I don’t have many images of the initial state of everything unfotunately, I’m sorry I can’t show you the details. I believe I had more, but can’t find them for the life of me.

The holes in the riser for the limbs weren’t tapped and the limbs themselves were all different draw weights, so the first thing I did was to tap some threads into the riser and find appropriate screws. As it usually is, the correctly sized smaller ones ended up being mismatched!

I may find some other screws, some day, maybe…

Next came the limbs. One of the them was fairly weaker than the other two so I decided to use the stronger pair. However, they still needed some sanding to get to roughly the same strength and tiller.

Here you can see the sanded limbs mounted on the riser:

To avoid any possible damage or delamination, I’ve only sanded the belly of the bow – the side of the limbs that faces the shooter when holding up the bow as if shooting.

I mounted the larger bolts with some extra-thick oversized washers I had picked up who-knows-where (and they seems to be machined from stainless steel rather than the usual punched out ones – very cool). This gives it a nice look, in my opinion, and helps distribute the force very evenly to the bottom of the limb. I felt that just the small screw head might rip through the hole with the large amount of levered force on that small area.

The next step was to make the bow look a bit nicer, so I took some spray paint and painted the limbs black.

I think the riser looks good as it is, so I’ve left it in the matte silver of the cast aluminum.

Here is the finished bow put together:

I’ve also added a stick-on arrow rest, because I don’t have any arrows with feather fletching, so I can’t shoot off the shelf.

The bow pulls about 21kg or 46lbs at 30” (which is my draw lenght) and I’ve bought 6 fairly cheap 30” aluminum arrows to try out, and I also have a mismatched wooden one that I got with the bow parts:

Here are all the arrows and a target made from a cardboard box and a bunch more cardboard stuffed inside:

And here is my first group with the bow (and first ever group with any bow actually – first time shooting!) at 15 meters, or about 50 feet:

The bow is actually a bit too strong for me, I strain somewhat to keep it at full draw. But all in all, I’m super happy with that!

Hopefully, I will get better with some time and practice.

I hope you enjoyed reading, see you for the next one.

Splitting logs into staves

As I’ve said before, to start working, I need to get my hands on some bow materials, or bow wood specifically in this instance since I’m planning on making a selfbow.

For that purpose, I have a few ash logs lying by my shed, waiting to be split into bow staves.

As you might imagine, it’s not a very complicated process. Still, you do need a bit of tools. Nothing special, but you won’t get far without a few wedges (I prefer forged iron, though you can get other/fancier materials like different polymers or what not), and a good, heavy sledgehammer. An axe also comes in handy for cutting any wood fiber that remains across your split.

When looking to make bow staves, I believe the best way to go is to follow any natural checking that the wood might already have.

If the log has been sitting and drying for longer then a week or so, it will certainly develop some cracks. If there are several, I try to split along the ones that look most promising and will give me a nice, straight stave without knots and twists.

I have this log that I’ve already split in half sooner, and there’s another crack forming in the right spot to miss a big knot to the left so I decided to run with it.

The first step here is to drive a wedge into the face of the log straight through that crack we’ve chosen.

That will start splitting the log and a lenghtwise crack will also appear. I give it a few more taps to widen that crack and insert another wedge into the log from the top.

Driving the new one in will continue splitting the log and allow me to pull out the first one. Or, in this case, it just fell to the ground on it’s own.

Then I take the first wedge, move it down the log and continue doing that till the log is split.

And that’s it, easy-peasy!

Now, you’ll notice that I’m left with kind of a bad result here. The straight piece I wanted, the one that doesn’t have a knot, tapers off to a point, and the other one is nice and (kinda) uniform in width. This happened because the grain pulled to the right. But there’s not much we can do about that and also keep with the natural path of the wood fibers.

The solution here will be to work with the length of log I have. It’s about two and a half meters long (a bit over 8 feet for my American friends), so I can take of a good half meter off and still have enough usable material. That will allow me to cut off the knot on the bottom end of the thicker stave and also the tip off the other one to leave me with two usable pieces.

So my advice here is to always cut your logs longer, if you have the option to. You never know for sure how the wood will look inside or how it will behave while splitting.

In the end, about an hour and a half and a few cuts later, I had 5 nice staves that I’ll bring inside to dry out. Some of these could probably be split further in half, but I decided against it. Didn’t want to ruin the whole stave by accident.

I still have a couple of smaller logs to go through, so that will give me plenty of material to practice.

Anyhow, that’s all for this post so thanks for reading, and catch you next time!

Welcome to CroBows

Hello to everyone that happened to chance upon this new website and have a very warm welcome!

This site is primarily intended to be a blog focused on making bows and everything regarding bows. Something that sets CroBows apart is that there are no bowyer blogs or websites in Croatia (that I have found at least) AND I myself have yet to make a bow at all!

Now you might be thinking „Well I’ve never made a bow either, along with most other people on Earth!“, but the difference is that I’m fully intending to and you can follow along with all the mistakes and fails and (hopefully) successes along the way.

I have very recently moved to a house in the contryside which finally allows me to have the space and resources to experiment with traditional and other bowmaking. I’ve been collecting knowledge, experiences and ideas for a while now, so it’s time to put them into action and see what can be done with the tools and materials that are available to me.

But first things first – I don’t have any sort of workshop yet!

There is currently only the house and a small shed on my property, so I will be transforming the shed (that held an amount of old firewood and some abandoned tools/materials) into a small workshop.

In the meantime, there were several large ash trees near the house that were felled due to being too close for comfort in case of a storm or similar events. I’ve left a few of the straighter pieces of their trunks aside to try and split into bow staves, while the rest has been cut into firewood (still waiting on chopping at this point – there are too many other tasks and chores that have priority at the moment).

So along with the shed cleanup, an update on splitting staves will be in order soon enough!

As always in life, we humans perpetually seem to be short on something. If it isn’t will or knowledge, it’s time, and if it isn’t time, it’s money, so hopefully this blog will some day allow me to improve my bowmaking skills by furthering my knowlege, motivating me to keep at it and even earning a smattering of tools and materials here and there.

At any rate, I hope that you will find at least some of the info that I plan on posting on my journey usefull and interesting, so please join along with me!