it depends on the shooter as stated,,
it is a very fine tune thing and some cant tell the difference or just intuitively tune the bow until it shoots well for them,,
the longer the bow,, it seems not to be as critical,,
but to get really great arrow flight with a wider range of spine,, the bow that is tillered well for that stave will shoot sweeter,, and be easier to tune,, sometimes the tiller will shift after alot of shooting ,, that is why you see some limbs shorter,, the bowmaker,, just adjusted the tiller like that,, instead of taking wood off the top limb,,( as to not loose weight) many ways to approach it,, but a great shooting bow will be the end result,,, give a well tillered bow to a really great shooter,, don't let him see the tiller, when he shoots it,, it will feel right to him not knowing what the tiller looks like,,, do the same with a badly tillered bow,, and the shooter wont enjoy shooting that bow,, having no idea what the tiller looks like,, so it is not so much about how it looks,, as how it will performs,,,