It may help to know when this shudder developed and what changes preceded it or if it has always been there. Also, did regapping lifters help any?
Some additional checks best done one at a time:
Check and record your cold cranking compression in each cylinder. Should not differ by more than 5 percent if all are healthy.
Check convertor flexplate for damage or loose convertor or flywheel bolts.
Install a brand new set of plugs and check for vibration.
If you have the stock Ford Y-block distributor, static time the engine using a 12 volt check light (a 12 Volt light socket, bulb and two arm length leads with alligator clips). Ground one and attach other to wire lead at the coil post common to the distributor lead. Pull distributor coil wire so engine can not fire for safety. Turn ignition on. Turn engine clockwise by hand at the crank damper bolt till #1 is coming up. Engine would have fired #1 cylinder when bulb lights. Note your timing mark on vibration damper. Mark #1 spark post position on distributor base. Remove distributor cap. Check rotor movement between zero advance and full mechanical plus vacuum advance to insure the distributor post at rest falls midway between the full rotor tip movement range. This insures cap and rotor have been properly clocked by your favorite parts stores secret offshore supplier (and you thought they were usa made) and that spark will not jump to wrong post at full vacuum advance.
Check inside dome of distributor cap for any kind of dust or grease residue and any sign of electrical tracking between all nine posts. Replace at hint of a problem.
In total darkness. have someone hold engine at peak vibration rpm and check engine plug wires for any visible sign of electrical leakage to ground or adjacent wires. Y-Blocks hide plug wires very well. Get a new spark plug wire. Bypass each plug wire one at a time to see if the new wire eliminates the vibration.
Try a different condenser and check for vibration. They can go bad. I found the hold down screw loose on a condenser once. Drove me nuts finding it.
Try a different coil and check for vibration.
If power brake equipped, check for booster diaphram leak by plugging intake manifold tap for booster and check for vibration.
#8 cylinder, lighter in color, could mean burning leaner (intake manifold gasket leak) or coolant getting into that cylinder. Any radiator coolant loss over 6 months?
If none of the prior tests fix the problem, turn focus on carburetor. Let us know what carburetor list number you have. I ran my Holley list 1273 50 years with a slight hesitation off idle that I now attribute to insufficant transition slot exposure. Vanished when 650 cfm 4011 replaced it.
Jerome