2 users agree
11:10 PM, Tuesday April 7th 2020

Your superimposed lines look smooth and consistent. Your ghosted lines have some slight wobbles but most of them maintain the correct trajectory. For your table of ellipses, it looks like you drew through your ellipses more than three times which is fine but the instructions say drawing through the ellipses two times is ideal. Your ellipses look nice and snug and the degree of the ellipses look fairly consistent within each section. Your ellipses in planes look fairly smooth and have minimal deformation. Your ellipses in funnels look aligned to the minor axis and the spacing between ellipses looks good. For your rough perspective, it looks like some of your boxes were not drawn according to the instructions which state:

In one point perspective (which we are using for this exercise), you have the following behaviours:

1.All lines that go off into the distance converge at the vanishing point
  1. All horizontal lines run perfectly parallel to the horizon

  2. All vertical lines run perfectly perpendicular to the horizon

In the future, I recommend reading each lesson carefully so you can get the most out of each homework assignment. With your box exercises I noticed you have some line corrections. Do your best to aim for one confident stroke after ghosting a few times. Your accuracy will improve over time with practice. Overall, you are off to a good start. Good luck with your boxes!

Next Steps:

Move on to the 250 box challenge.

This community member feels the lesson should be marked as complete, and 2 others agree. The student has earned their completion badge for this lesson and should feel confident in moving onto the next lesson.
7:47 AM, Monday January 17th 2022

I just got online, and thank you very much. I will keep these in mind next time. Thank you again!

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The Science of Deciding What You Should Draw

The Science of Deciding What You Should Draw

Right from when students hit the 50% rule early on in Lesson 0, they ask the same question - "What am I supposed to draw?"

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