This post is way off track.
Docks, this is your first project.
You want a good bookshelf, with good power output, that will mate well with a sub and integrate easily. Right?
You want a first project with a high chance of success.
You absolutely do not need to make this a three way no what another poster insists.
Good speakers use the least number of crossovers possible and try and do the least damage with every one. This makes the acoustic responses of your drivers and the T/S parameters of the woofer paramount. What the drivers are made of and there mode of operation is VERY secondary.
People who drone on about the properties of woofer cone materials etc. have never designed and built a speaker that was any good.
I have selected for you a woofer and tweeter that will mate well together and give you good power handling as a THX type arrangement crossing over to the sub at 80 Hz.
Your woofer.
Your tweeter.
You can crossover very happily in the 2 to 2.5 kHz range.
I have not played with the crossovers, but something like fourth order for the woofer and second order for the tweeter will likely give you a nice composite fourth order response.
However making a good crossover is the real art. I suspect that the woofer crossover may have to change orders.
I think these drivers with a good crossover and a sealed alignment is capable of very good results indeed.
If you want higher power handling and a better horizontal response with limitation of the vertical response, these drivers would make a very nice small sealed MTM.