I forgot to mention how I built my work bench; I can work with abstract forms but nailing two boards together square mystifies me, I knew I couldn't make functionable drawers with only a bandsaw to cut the wood. I went to Lowe's and bought two matching cabinet units with drawers, they came as parts in a box that need to be assembled.
I assembled the cabinets and built my workbench frame to house them perfectly. I made my bench top out of 2X10s and my legs out of two 2X4s glued and screwed together, this bench weighs a ton and won't move if I am doing some heavy drawknifing on osage bow staves. I added some shelves on the ends and later had a woodworking friend make me some more drawers to fit above the shelves.
I also built my work bench 42" tall so I don't have to bend over to work on bows or guns.
The picture is of my Nephew working on a bow, no bending over, he is 6' 3".
The next picture is my first attempt at a workbench from 30 years ago, I probably made 50 bows on this bench and worked in a 5'X7" corner of the garage by the water heater before I moved to the country and built a shop. I would have been ashamed to put this testament to my poor woodworking skills in a new shop.
I put this old work bench up on Craigslist for free just to have someone haul it off, it was gone within an hour of my posting it and the guy who got it loves it, he uses it for reloading.
It had been sitting in the basement for 15 years gathering dust and anything else that needed a resting place when I took this picture.