Welcome (back!) to drawabox! I’m TA Benj, and I’ll be taking a look at your submission today.

Starting with your superimposed lines, these are well done. They’re smooth, all lined up on the left, and of a consistent trajectory. Your ghosted lines/planes look quite confident, also, and I’m pleased to see that you’ve not forgotten to plot start/end points for the non-diagonal center lines of your planes (most students do!)

Moving on to the ellipse section, the table of ellipses exercise looks good. Your ellipses look a little similar, as far as their degrees are concerned, but they’re smooth, rounded, and properly drawn through, so we’re satisfied with them. The ellipses in planes exercise looks great, too. Despite the difficulty of these new frames, you’ve done a good job of maintaining your ellipses’ prior smoothness/roundness. Finally, nice work on your funnels – they’re equally confident, and to top it off, your ellipses here are snug, and properly cut into equal, symmetrical halves.

As for the box section, the plotted perspective exercise looks clean.

The rough perspective exercise is well done, also, and I’m very happy to see so many unused points on the page. That said, one thing to check against those points, is whether your back lines are parallel/perpendicular to the horizon. If they’re not, then your box is for sure incorrect, so rather than doubling down, give those points another look.

Solid attempt at the rotated boxes exercise. It’s a little small, but its boxes are snug, and properly rotating. This is not, quite as often, the case in the back, but that’s entirely expected, and nothing to stress over. As we progress into the box challenge, we’ll go into how one goes about constructing a box, and you’ll be able to apply that knowledge here, on revisiting.

Speaking of boxes, you’ve put yourself in a great position to tackle the box challenge with your performance in the organic perspective exercise. Not only are your boxes here well constructed (due, in part, to the amount of time you’ve spent planning them!), but their size and foreshortening make it so that they flow quite well, too.