I would suggest, that you take the bow off of the tree, stand in front of a solid color background, a white wall as an example, and then draw the bow by hand. Have someone snap a pic. I would only draw it to half the distance your at now, as if there is a problem, you can fix it early in the draw and avoid the problem of damaging one beyond repair by pulling it past that problem. The tiller will likely look a little different in the hand, with pressure points being what they are when drawing one. Get your opinions then, half the drawn distance, in hand, with a background that provides contrast with the bow. Those opinions will be more valuable than any you get right now. Fix any flat spots and perfect the tiller at say 14 or 15 inches. When it is near perfect, then go a few inches farther and repeat the pic. Continue at that pace until you have it perfect at full draw. You will avoid the cast robbing set that occurs from yanking one back too far, too early.