If your limbs are symmetrical, then your lower limb should be slightly stiffer, which it looks like it might be. So it's probably better that the lower limb is a tad stiffer out of the fade. I usually tiller mine so that the lower limb is about 1/4 - 1/2" stiffer than the upper at full draw. This is easy to see on the tiller tree, but not quite as easy when drawn by hand. Some guys measure the positive tiller at brace, but I never really tried that myself, and I'm not sure what kind of measurement you'd be looking for.
You may already know this, but the reason that the lower limb has to be stiffer when the limbs are equal length is because you are knocking your arrow and pulling the string back about 1 1/2" above center, which effectively makes the lower limb longer. If they were both tillered the same, then the top limb would return "home" before the lower limb, and induce a vibration into the bow (hand shock).
Another thing that you can do to help reduce the handshock, as suggested, is to reduce the weight of the tips, which is usually done by removing mass from the sides rather than the belly, to keep the last few inches stiff.