This is an interesting topic, especially for someone just beginning. There are several factors that go into play when you start trying to figure out limb length/handle placement. Its also a good idea to use a pencil and paper, and have a bottle of aspirin nearby. If you are going to build a bow with a long riser and cut-in arrow shelf then using the method of 1 1/2" above and 2 1/2" below center is theoretically accurate, and will yield a longer top limb, which crates the need for a stronger shorter limb. All this is good advice for a longer bow or an ELB. However, for the sake of ease and simplicity and choosing to 'shoot off the knuckle'--which it seems many of us eventually gravitate to, then doing as Del and DarkSoul have said: center the bow on the tillering tree at the spot where your hand will grip the bow, this will pretty much ensure that the finished bow will be bending evenly out of your hand at full draw. But as Roy said, the arrow rest will still be an inch or so off-center (this factor is slightly adjusted when/if the string is pulled using a 3 finger draw, with 2 fingers under the arrow and 1 on top. This is also the reason why its a good idea to pull the bow an inch further on the tillering tree than what is to be the shooting draw length; since on the tillering tree the string is only going around a nail or peg, whereas in hand more string is being used to go around a couple inches of gloved fingers.) Sorry for the windy comment, but this may help to explain why a perfectly tillered bow on the 'tree' isn't perfectly tillered in the hand.