Lesson 1: Lines, Ellipses and Boxes

2:15 AM, Thursday January 30th 2025

Drawabox Lesson 01 - Album on Imgur

Imgur: https://imgur.com/a/7p3LLyv

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Hi! I scanned the pages so that they were easier to see on a screen. Please let me know if any other format is preferred. The first fineliners I could get where apparently not the best, but I wanted to avoid using something other than the recommended tools, so I kept using them for a while until I could get a new one for the rotated boxes exercise. I truly hope it doesn't make your work harder. Sorry for that!

Thank you in advance for the feedback!

2:18 AM, Friday January 31st 2025

Welcome and congratulations on finishing the first lesson of Drawabox! I'm Mada and I'll be taking a look at your submission.

Overall you did an excellent job here, but I do have a bit to mention so let's break them down one by one. I'll write the most important things in bold.

Lines

Starting with your superimposed lines, these are looking good. Ghosted lines look correctly ghosted and confident too, and there are barely any arching. You've also demonstrated the same confidence in your ghosted planes with a great accuracy. Nothing much to say except keep up the good work!

Ellipses

Now with the tables of ellipses, you've demonstrated a great understanding of the concept in executing confident ellipses. The ellipses in planes are nice, you drew it confidently and snugly in their respective planes.

The funnels are also looking great; you've managed to fit them snugly and confidently, but with a bit of misalignment to the minor axis (you can make this easier by rotating the paper as you align the ellipses). Otherwise, I have no complaints here as your ellipses will tighten as you get more practice.

Boxes

You've shown a good understanding of how to make 2 point perspective in the plotted perspective. I did see some skewed back vertical lines here and there, which is usually caused by an accumulation of human error as you plot more and more lines. I assume that's the case and you understand that every vertical line is straight in 2 point perspective. Even if the points are not aligned correctly, try to find a middle ground and draw it as vertical as you can.

You've applied the ghosting method and lines extension correctly for the rough perspective. You also drew the front/back faces rectangular, which is correct for 1 point perspective.

As the notoriously most difficult exercise in this lesson, you've done a great job at doing the rotated boxes. You've rotated them pretty well (while making sure to move the converging lines) and used neighboring elements to deduce the next orientation of boxes, which is the whole purpose of this exercise.

Finally, organic perspective looks great as well. They look like they belong in the same page and the lines converge as they move farther away from the viewer. There are a few hiccups here and there where there are divergences that results in skewed boxes, but overall they're minor and they look pretty solid.

This will get more relevant as you get to the box challenge, but any hatching from this point on should also be done with the ghosting method. It will make your stuff cleaner and more practice is always good! Try to cover the whole area of the box with consistent spacing.

Anyway, I think you've grasped the concepts of the whole lesson and ready to put them into practice in warmups. Again, congratulations and keep up the good work!

Next Steps:

Move onto the 250 box challenge.

Do the lesson 1 exercises as your regular warmup and don't forget your 50% rule art.

This critique marks this lesson as complete.
4:04 AM, Friday January 31st 2025

Thank you so much! I'll keep all of the feedback in mind for the warmup and the following lessons/challenges.

You've made clear some things I wasn't so sure about, which is great. Especially about the hatching, and the back vertical edges in the plotted perspective exercise. I thought we were expected to draw them slanted when the corners didn't line up, even if I knew they had to be perfectly vertical if I had done everything perfectly. I'll avoid it from now on when doing this exercise. Thanks!

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