Offering some advice that will nearly eliminate this problem going forward. Put your bow on the tiller stick or tree. Pull only a few inches. What does it look like? Does the straight edge confirm or contradict what you see? If it confirms, go a few more inches and repeat. But if it contradicts.....Don’t...Go...Any...Further. This is where I see most new bowmakers screwing up. Fix the issue first, before doing anything else. Full Stop! Going any further without fixing the issue first...at best a waste of time, effort and material. You may not fix it entirely at that stage, but you will or should, greatly improve the issue. Now go a few inches more and check it. Looks good? Does the straight edge confirm or contradict? If it confirms go a few more inches, but if it contradicts, Don’t....Go...Any...Further. Fix it now. I know several things are at work that leads to this, #1. Your tiller eye is not developed. Been there. Use the straight edge or gizmo or computer circles to augment your tiller eye. #2. You just want to finish a bow. Been there. Pulling your bow to 15 inches when a problem is spotted at 10 inches, a recipe for sub par results. Pulling it to 27 inches...a recipe for failure. Post pictures at 10 inches. Get a good consensus that it’s fixed, then go to 12 inches, then 14 and so forth. The better that tiller is very early on, the easier it will be to finish it up, as you will just be adjusting the draw weight in the latter stages, instead of fighting an issue now, that you may never get past without ending up with a 19 lb draw weight. Never pull past a problem in the tiller.