BB1,
Although it would change the look of your project, the front edge of the shelf could be straightened by adding a reinforcing rail along the front edge, typically a strip of wood that Âľ" thick X 1-1/2" wide, glued to the edge to the underside of the front edge of the shelf. To determine whether this might be an option, a scrap piece of wood more or less the length of the shelf and 1-1/2" wide could be clamped to the front edge of the shelf. If it fails to work, the shelf which looks to be about 1" thick, could be planed to a thickness of Âľ". This would make the shelf a little more flexible and easier to straighten with a reinforcing rail. If this method works, it may require either a dado in the back of the shelf unit or a similarly installed reinforcing rail along the back edge of the shelf. This would depend on whether the front reinforcing rail is effective in bringing the shelf to flat across its entire width.
If you elect to rip, alternately flip, and re-glue the shelf suggested by RichTaylor and the shelf has no twist, using a feather board to keep the shelf firmly against the fence would probably be the best bet for a straight glue-ready edge. A sharp and clean saw blade set perfectly 90 degrees to the table saw table and a steady feed rate can also help. If all does not go well, then some more material would have to be removed as the edges are prepared for glue-up, further narrowing the overall shelf width. If the shelf has a twist, the board may rock when ripped and getting a good glue line would be very difficult.
If the shelf is a little too narrow after ripping, some width could be added with the reinforcing rail. A rabbet cut in the rail that would engage the front and bottom surface of the shelf and then gluing in place could restore the width you need.
Like rwe2156, I am pessimistic that efforts short of planning one face flat and running the opposite face through the planer, will bring the hickory to flat and straight. I suspect the hickory has assumed its forever shape. Also if the shelf unit has sides to which the shelves attach, shelves that are bowed to differing extents could cause problems during assembly since the shelves measured from end to end could be different lengths. This could lead the non-parallel sides and/or if one shelf straightens out more than others, stress would be added to the joinery.
Another trip to the hardwood store would probably lead you back to where you are now; wood that may look good at the store but after a day or two in the shop it begins to move a little and does not look quite so good.
Although I am not sure you are interested, I found a fairly good article published by Popular Woodworking in 2009 about lumber movement. It explains the cause and results of different types of wood movement and methods to milling these boards…
http://www.popularwoodworking.com/article/why-wood-warps
- JBrow