We are all just shooting in the dark offering advise regarding taper rates and stack height until we know what your design looks like, the riser length, and bow length.
For example a straight lay up long bow may have a .420 stack height with two .002 forward tapers in the stack. Giving you a .004 taper rate.
a RD long bow of the same draw weight, or a hybrid long bow with more reflex in the limb shape would be lower stack height. Say .380 or .370. And run a .003 forward taper. One taper at .001 and one at .002, or two .0015.
On a recurve bow of the same draw weight, the stack height drops again considerably, as well as the taper rate. Your width profile is wider too. Most recurves that have excellent stability run an .001 taper rate. A heavier draw weight can take a faster taper rate and still maintain stability, and lower draw weights you do better going with .001 or parallel lams, or even a reverse taper.
All the stack heights are just hypothetical here my post. Where you measure the thickness to determine the stack varies from one bowyer to the next too. I have no idea where Bingham’s measures their thickness on a one piece bow. I measure mine where my fade tips are going to be.
To answer your question. Where the tapers and parallels are in the lay up makes no difference at all. It’s over all taper rate, and location of your fade tips, and width profile shape that determines how that limb bends, and where it bends.
After you get your feet wet , You can look into using tip wedges and power wedges to manipulate your limbs further if you are so inclined, but I wouldn’t dive into that yet. Get the basics down first. Hope this helps…. Kirk
Ps.
Most beginners start with a long bow to get the feel of the whole process. Building recurve bows are a bit tougher to do. Good luck