It may help if I explain what I'm building.
I cut 2 pieces of Osage and squared them up, then I've got a piece of Rosewood I found in some scrap in my garage that's almost the same size as the Osage. I'm going to sandwich the Rosewood in between the Osage for my riser and make a take down longbow or maybe recurve the limb tips a bit and was actually wondering about the limb lengths in relationship to the riser. I had planned on cutting my riser shelf dead center, but then my hand will be below that, so all this positive tiller will come into play because I will be gripping the bow below center. I guess that's what you all mean by leaving the bottom limb heavier/shorter and the top limb longer/weaker to even out the fact that I will be gripping the bow below center.....is that correct?
It's kind of hard for me to grasp because if I grip the bow below center, I'm in effect already shortening the lower half of the bow and making the top longer because it's above my hand.
It's a bit mind boggling for a new bow maker just starting out. I've only got one Osage longbow under my belt so far and it turned out fairly good, but I had no idea on where to put the shelf so I just went 1" above actual center. Maybe I got lucky with that one?