Thanks guys.
Don, it's not going to win a flight competition. The deflex makes it very steady shooting for it's lenght, though. I felt very clearly "conducted" by the wood on this one, also, I did not want to do any bending in order to preserve the wood colours. It just all fell in place, it even has a natural arrow pass mark exactly in the spot.
Zion, you're right, I like Druid's bows a lot and feel inspired by his work. The reason my pics seem similar might be the following: Bows are long and slim, and this makes it a difficult to fill a picture with a bow. Hence the picture strips you see sometimes. What I do and I think Druid is doing as well is to picture them from a bit further away, but with as much zoom/tele as I can (using my standart digicam, no lens). Ever noticed how stuff looks like cartboard attrappes through binoculars? That is because the zooming reduces the depth dimension. They use that in movies, for example to make a group of riders look more dense. And it also helps to fill a standart format with a bow.
But I don't know if he really does this as well. The idea came to me when looking at his pics. Most extreme example is the fencepost shot.