You are off and running now! Things will smooth out as you get more bows under your belt. The first ones all are a bit blocky shaped until you get get comfortable. Good looking rig there.
I would seriously try and steer you towards using heavier riser material. Black walnut is cool looking, but has a history of riser failure. Same with curly maple.
Use rock hard maple, bubinga, Iron wood, and other hardwoods with more density, and you’ll get more mass weight in the riser and better strength. This is a good thing.
If you want to use the softer hardwoods, you should look into using I beam construction, or tie your limb pads together with a full overlay on the back side.
You really need to cap that end grain on the back of the riser. Riser failures are heart breaking, and you can end up with a knot on your gourde too.
Question: Why are you putting overlays on the bottom of the limb butts where they mount on the riser? Are those overlays on top of your glass?
Don’t be surprised if you see those start lifting a bit after extended use. Overlays in that location don’t do well under compression. Even glass overlays can lift and separate in the wedge area on the belly side like that.
Kirk