Hi fuzziest of dunlops, congratulations on finishing lesson 1! I'll be critiquing your work, and it'll be structured similarly to the lesson itself. I may seem a little harsh at times, but don't take any of it personally. I want you to improve as much as possible :)

In regards to ghosting, I'd advice you to try out different speeds of mark execution when doing warmup exercises. I had noticed with my own work that I sometimes ghost too quickly, which is why I overshot lots of my lines. Keep on experimenting with these kinds of things :]

Lines

Your superimposed lines look great! I can see you've drawn confidently and put in the effort to keep the fraying generally on one end, but it could become even better if you take the time to place your pen at the exact same starting point each time. But in general, noice!

Ghosted lines: most of your lines look very wobbly, which is fair in the beginning since this is the first time you're actually ghosting. But try to consciously convince yourself that your line will hit the mark, and execute your mark quickly and from your shoulder so that your mark is as straight as possible. Also force yourself to first focus on getting your lines as straight as possible, and later focus on accuracy. It's no problem if you can't get your lines to hit the mark yet, this will all come with mileage in all these different exercises and will continue to improve in the 250 Box challenge. Overall, a decent attempt!

Ghosted planes: I can already see a great improvement in your line confidence, great job! I do see that you're curving your lines quite visibly at times, don't forget to rotate your paper as much as needed, and keep on ghosting! You've gone wild with varying the shapes, love it. Again, confidence > accuracy. Accuracy will improve over time.

Ellipses

Tables of ellipses: you've drawn through each ellipse multiple times, great! Your ellipses do look generally quite wobbly, are you using your shoulder for these? If not, you should definitely use your shoulder. It might ache a lot in the beginning because the muscle hasn't been developed for this kind of motion yet, but keep at it and take regular breaks to prevent strain. I do really like the amount of variety you have with your degrees and orientation, noice! They're also mostly fitting snugly within the given borders, and each cell stays consistent with the orientation & degree of each ellipse. The actual shape of the ellipse is decent, maybe try to consciously feel the motion of your shoulder when ghosting, and I'd advise you to ghost ~5-10 times at the very least (especially in the beginning) for each ellipse.

Did you skip the ellipses in planes exercise? Or did you just forget to upload it?

Funnels: The orientation of your ellipses is quite good, it strays a little from the minor axis of the funnel but that'll fix itself with time (especially with lesson 2's exercises). All the feedback from Tables of Ellipses applies here as well, but don't worry too much about it. It's really tough to nail ellipses and any kind of circular motion. Attempting these exercises at all already makes you much more awesome than the many people who give up because it's too hard.

Boxes

Now to the fun part. Plotted perspective: Amazing. It's not the hardest exercise in this lesson, but it can still get somewhat confusing with all these lines going to vanishing points. Don't forget to take your time when plotting out the vertical lines, some are a little bit at an angle. All in all, great job!

Rough perspective: I can see by the dots you've put down that you've taken your time to try to keep your x & y lines as horizontal and vertical respectively as possible (I hope you can understand this sentence lol). The execution leaves some room for improvement, but that's fine because we're only at the prologue of the beginning when it comes to dealing with boxes. Try to think of your lines not as part of a box, but as what they are; lines. Treat each and every line equally, ghost each and every line until you feel like you can nail the motion, and fearlessly execute the mark. If you f up the trajectory, that's fine. We're here to learn and to make mistakes. What's important is that you don't try to be accurate by slowly executing your mark if it results in a wobbly line. Do a little bit of superimposed lines to gain a little more confidence and then try these again when doing warmups. It's great that you check each and every convergence, and while the differences are definitely visible, I can guarantee you that the untrained eye will still very much view them as boxes. Not perfect boxes, but still boxes. So in that sense, achievement unlocked :]

Rotated boxes: I'm not seeing enough rotation. When looking at the horizontal row of boxes, from the middle to the one to the right you've done it correctly, but from the first to the right to the outer box there's no rotation. The outer box' "horizontal" lines should convergence more extremely than the one left from it. Basically, the more towards the edge of the entire drawing you are, the more extreme you'll need to converge your lines. It's a tough exercise and you've done your best to attempt it, you've also drawn through your forms so I won't ask you to complete it again. But if you ever feel like attempting it again, look through submissions from other students, watch Uncomfortable's video again, and also watch Scyllastew's video. She has videos on her going through basically all of lesson 1 & 2's exercises, it might be helpful. You've done your best and it's pretty good, but specifically the rotation of your boxes can you some work.

Organic perspective: A decent variety in size, nice! Don't forget that you can overlap your boxes as well. The bigger one (which would be the one in front) would have a little extra lineweight around the intersecting points. Overlapping boxes will create an even bigger sense of scale. Also, your boxes need to be all in 3-point perspective (I personally missed that requirement as well. It's no big deal, just pointing it out). Your boxes definitely look a lot more confidently drawn than in Rough Perspective, so I'm already seeing a good deal of improvement, love it :].

All in all, pretty solid submission, I can't mark it as complete yet until I've seen your Ellipses in Planes. But with all the others you're on the right track! :)