I like the the overall lines and materials used. Good color combinations. The blade shape I like very much. It *maybe* could use a little less belly, but with the recurve it still works.
A more modern bowie/fighter might have less belly and a leaner, sharper point. As it sits, this falls nicely into what many might call a camp knife/chopper. But I digress.....semantics.
The ricasso is a tad long to my eye and I would also agree that the arc/curve in the bottom edge of the ricasso is a little rough. And it also visually detracts a bit from overall flow, not seamlessly flowing into the curve behind the finger guard.
Now....about the bolster.....I don't have any issue with the length of the bolster. I typically like longer bolsters, much better than shorter ones.
My issue with the bolster is how the dovetail angle works against the drastic radical curves of your handle edges. This is just personal preference now. I like that you really curved and shaped the handle edges. But when you do that combined with a steep dovetail, you get that really pronounced curve in the joint that actually looks like it undercuts and points back at the blade.....I hope that makes sense.
Its something I used to do all the time but I really started to dislike that turn back curve at the bolster joint. It just looks off to me. So in a lot of cases, I stopped dovetailing my bolsters.
I would like to see the swedge grind a little crisper and more defined. How did you grind the swedge in and at what point in the process was it done?