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6:52 PM, Monday July 24th 2023

Hi there, I'll be handling your box challenge critique.

Not only does the challenge help deepen your understanding of important concepts but it shows your desire to learn as well. That being said I'll try to keep this critique fairly brief so you can get working on the next steps as soon as possible.

Things you did well:

  • Your construction lines are looking smooth and confidently drawn.

  • You're doing a great job of experimenting with orientations. Experimenting is an important habit to build when learning any new skill, it helps form a more well rounded understanding. I hope you'll continue to display and nurture this habit in the future.

Things you can work on:

  • They're not a requirement of the challenge but I recommend practicing applying hatching and line weight in your future work. They're useful tools to learn and the only way to improve is to practice.

  • I'd like you to experiment with rates of foreshortening and proportions more. Currently you tend to keep your lines close to parallel and push your vanishing points far from your boxes or you switch to 1 or 2 point perspective. Try bringing all of your points in closer so that your lines have to converge more dramatically. As for proportions try to mix in some longer/thinner/wider boxes to see how your lines behave in different scenarios. Remember that experimentation is important.

  • There are times when your lines converge in pairs or you attempt to keep your lines a bit too parallel which results in them diverging. This is an example of lines converging in pairs, and this shows the relation between each line in a set and their respective vanishing point. The inner pair of lines will be quite similar unless the box gets quite long and the outer pair can vary a lot depending on the location of the vanishing point. Move it further away and the lines become closer to parallel while moving it closer increases the rate of foreshortening.

The key things we want to remember from this exercise are that our lines should always converge as a set not in pairs, never diverge from the vanishing point and due to perspective they won't be completely parallel.

I won't be moving you on to the next lesson just yet, each lesson builds off concepts in the previous course material so if you move forward with un-addressed issues you end up just creating further issues on top of them.

I'll be asking you to draw 30 more boxes. For the first 15 I'd like you to draw all 3 of your vanishing points explicitly on the page after you've drawn your initial Y shape, this will force you to work with vanishing points closer to your box. For the latter 15 you can go back to the original method which should hopefully be easier an easier task after the first 15.

Once you've completed your boxes reply to this critique with a link to them, I'll address anything that needs to be worked on and once you've shown you're ready I'll move you on to the next lesson.

I know you can do this and look forward to seeing your work.

Next Steps:

30 boxes please.

When finished, reply to this critique with your revisions.
1:01 AM, Thursday July 27th 2023

You didn't draw your vanishing points on the page and you're still switching to 1 and 2 point perspective rather than bringing all 3 vanishing points in closer. I'll be asking you to redo these 30 boxes.

Again the instructions are: For the first 15 I'd like you to draw all 3 of your vanishing points explicitly on the page after you've drawn your initial Y shape, this will force you to work with vanishing points closer to your box. For the latter 15 you can go back to the original method which should hopefully be easier an easier task after the first 15.

If you have any questions before getting started feel free to ask them.

Next Steps:

30 more boxes.

When finished, reply to this critique with your revisions.
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12:28 AM, Thursday July 27th 2023

I made a mistake. I frogot to put all the vanishing points on the page. I only did one set on the page ????.

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