Yup! – no worries. Let’s take a look at how you did, then.

Starting off, the superimposed lines look good. They’re smooth, properly lined up at the start, and of a consistent trajectory. The ghosted lines look quite confident, also, but I’ll remind you that each line is to be drawn once, and only once, regardless of how it turns out. In other words, you should resist the urge to redraw a line when it comes out wrong – otherwise, what you end up doing is not fixing your mistakes, but rather drawing more attention to them. Also, with regards to the planes, see if you can make your start/end points a little smaller. The idea is that a perfect line should swallow them both.

Moving on to the ellipse section, the table of ellipses exercise is mostly well done. Your ellipses are smooth, more often than not, rounded, and properly drawn through. I say more often than not because, sometimes, your ellipses will come out a little pointy. This is usually an indication of a lesser pivot working its way in, so always make sure that the marks you make originate from your shoulder, only. The ellipses in planes are well done; despite these more complicated frames, they maintain their prior smoothness, and improve on their prior roundness. Do be careful, however, that you rotate around them a full 2 times, rather than settling for 1 and change. Nice job on the funnels. There’s the occasional misaligned ellipse, so do see if you can spend a little longer on the ghosting stage, and consider, for your next attempt, to increase the degrees of your ellipses as you move away from the center of the funnel.

The plotted perspective exercise looks clean.

The rough perspective exercise shows some nice improvement throughout the set – I’m especially pleased to see that you’re looking at your work critically, and aiming to improve in each frame. And, indeed, improve you do; by the end, the only real issue is the automatic reinforcing, which we’ve discussed. Keep up the good work.

The rotated boxes exercise is a little small (drawing big is something we encourage our students to do, as it’s effective in giving them some much-needed room to think), but well done, otherwise. Your boxes are snug, and they rotate quite comfortably too. The former is also the case in the back; the latter not as much, but that’s perfectly normal, and something that’ll improve as you progress through the box challenge, so no need to stress.

I wonder if you’re plotting any start/end points for your lines in the organic perspective exercise. If you’re not, know that you should be. Other than that, the exercise is well done; as per their size, and foreshortening, your boxes flow well, and they’re quite well constructed, also.