I just love the looks of an unbacked yew bow and would like to avoid covering it up
One of the things I quickly learned when I started making bows was that you hardly ever get a bow looking the way you wanted when you first start it.
It's so much better to end up with a working bow, as it will last far longer and see you through much more, than if it looked nice but had a weak area. If it needs sinew wraps, or complete backings to turn it from a pretty wallhanger into a fast, powerful working longbow, then let it speak to you and give it what it wants. Also, you'll start to love the little "ugly" bits you end up with, as they become "character." Knots, sinew wraps, patches... they are the reason we spend so long making self-bows, rather than having perfect, clean fiberglass type creations.
You might end up with a beautiful yew longbow at some point, with flawless sapwood, knot-free, dead straight profile and so on, but you'll probably shoot the character bows more often