Welcome to drawabox! No worries regarding the tools and hatching. As for the redone lines, we certainly don’t encourage the habit, but for now it’s alright. Let’s take these one at a time, then.

Starting with your superimposed lines, these look to be well done (though the page is cropped in such a way that I can’t see all of their starting points). You do seem to fray quite a bit on the right, but this is alright for now, and something that will improve in time. Your lines so far are smooth, straight, and of a consistent trajectory. Your ghosted lines/planes show some a good start, also. I’m especially pleased to see that you’ve not forgotten to plot start/end points for the non-diagonal center lines of the planes, as so many students do. You should perhaps spend a little more time ghosting between them, though, as your lines will sometimes hesitate on approach. Remember: you’re free to spend as long as you need on the preparation phase, but once you decide to commit, you’re not allowed to stress about how the line is coming out anymore – you just allow it to repeat the same motion. If you’re not ready – this is to say, if you stress and hesitate – then simply ghost for longer!

The table of ellipses exercise is not bad. There’s certainly the odd ellipse that is wobbly, or pointy (this last, in particular, is dangerous, because it indicates that you might be defaulting to a lesser pivot for those particular marks), but these are things that will improve so long as you aim for that to improve. So, as before, remind yourself that our #1 priority is confidence (not accuracy!), and make decisions accordingly. The ellipses in planes suffer from these issues more, you likely noticed. This is because we’re much stricter regarding their shape this time around (they have 4 points they need to make contact with!), but our priorities don’t change because of this. We’re still much happier with an ellipse that is smooth, and rounded, but completely misses the mark, than one that is accurate, but wobbly. The funnels show some good improvement on that respect, though there’s quite a large number of misaligned ellipses here so as before, please don’t rush the ghosting stage! It helps to ghost each ellipse individually, too, and rotate the page for each one. If you just ghost the one, and then draw the rest with the same general motion, they’ll share their errors.

The plotted perspective exercise looks clean. There’s the expected error with some of the back lines, but that’s hard to avoid, so no stress. The rough perspective exercise starts off strong and shows some good improvement throughout the set. Your boxes are quite big and ambitious, too! By the end, not only are your convergences on point, but your linework is quite confident, too. There’s a bit more overshooting than we’d like, but as mentioned before, confidence is more important than accuracy, so we’ll take that over a wobbly line that’s more accurate. Good work with the rotated boxes exercise. Your boxes here are big and snug, and though they don’t rotate quite as much as we’d like, they make a good attempt of it, anyway. They’re better in the back, and in areas aside from the main axes, so the exercise improved over time, too – this is good to see. We’ll be discussing all things boxes in the upcoming challenge, so don’t stress about any questions you may have, by the way – they’ll be answered soon! Finally, the organic perspective exercise is nicely done. The repeat lines are a little much, here, but that’s okay for now. I’m pleased to see so many unused points on your page – these have served you well, and your boxes are very well constructed as a result of them. Their size is perhaps a little inconsistent, but their foreshortening is such that they flow well, just the same. Good work here.