for a 60" bow, I would not brace it over 6" unless you need to in order to achieve proper arrow flight. during construction, there is no good reason to brace it any higher. if you are satisfied that the tiller is correct at 24", then pull it to 25" several times and check it again. if all is still well, pull it to 26", and so on. if tiller goes astray, make corrections and proceed.
as a rule, once I have a bow braced for the first time I never pull it beyond 5lbs over the target finished draw weight. (i.e. if I'm making a bow that I want 60lbs at 28", then I don't pull it beyond 65lbs, whether that is at 10" or 27")
drawing a bow under construction too far too soon is only inviting string follow or ourtright failure unecessarily. you lose weight both by removing stock and from compression.
once the limbs are bending gracefully and synchronously, "tillering" is as simple as removing wood evenly, and coaxing it incrementally to full draw, being ever mindful of draw weight and maintaining correct tiller.
in the last pic, it appears that you have positive tiller in the limb on the right, whichever limb that is. what matters most is that tiller is correct at full draw. it matters not what tiller looks like a brace height, although, if tiller is correct at full draw, it is almost always correct at brace height by default.
unless you are making tip overlays out of solid steel or granite, you'll not likely notice any affect on performance.
unless you fear for the integrity of the back of your bow, adding a backing like rawhide(which is quite heavy) is only adding mass to the limbs and robbing the bow, especially a light weight bow, of cast. if you have violated the growth ring that is the bows back or you have doubts about it being tension-safe, then back the bow. a good option in such a case is to lay on a backing of raw silk and cyanoacrolate(super glue). this is a very strong and lightweight backing. two courses of silk and c/a glue will do a tremendous amount of tension work.