Big~
You just need to rough out your bow and leave it 4-8 inches longer that you want it to be when it's finished. Make sure it looks even in width and thickness as you rough it out. Then when you feel like the limbs are beginning to flex, slightly floo tiller your roughed out bow, from just out of the fades, to tips-make sure you have everything bending, then of course do the other limb. T this point, only concern yourself that every inch is bending evenly. Don't worry about pull weight just yet. Next, after floor tillering seems to show you that everything is bending evenly, get a tillering string and string the bow on your tillering gizmo, with a very low brace height. (Just enough to be able to step back from the bow and be able to see the tiller, with the bow in a slight arc. Start out on the first notch, then try second and then third. If it is not even, file or scrape the stiff spots, and try again. Never file or scrape too much at one time. If it looks even, Take it off this tillering gizmo, and use the tillering string as a temporary bowstring, to pull the bow slightly and get a feel for where the poundage is. File/scrape/sand as necessary, til you get about where you want it to be. If at this point your bow is still a little too long, trim your end, ONE INCH at a time. Continue to file/scrape as necessary.
I hope this helps you. This is how I do it, except I haven't made myself a tillering gizmo yet, but I need to and am going to.
~Matt