Hey! Nice job on completing lesson 1! Let's see how you're doing:

Superimposed Lines:

Good line confidence! You're starting in the same spot consistently, and have a smooth stroke, and are ending with little deviation. Of course there's a bit of a struggle with the longer lines, but that's entirely natural and will better with time. Overall solid job!

Ghosted Lines:

Looking good! Use of the ghosted method is evident and you're very consistent all throughout. I'm also happy to see that, even if your a bit off the mark or overshoot by a bit, you continue to keep that line smooth and straight. This mindset of prioritizing confidence over accuracy is essential and will help out a lot in later lessons (And accuracy will improve with practice anyways), so keep it up!

Ghosted Planes:

Confidence is as good as always! There's really nothing else from what I've previously said. Only a little recommendation: Try to experiment more by drawing different lines (Similar to how you did in the ghosted lines exercise). It will expand your horizons and make practicing all-the-more helpful.

Tables of Ellipses:

A solid start. The majority of ellipses are confident and well-fit. I can see drawing through the ellipses is working, as the second go-around is consistently more accurate than the previous. You also have good variation with your ellipses, which is always nice to see. Only recommendation I have is to practice the more extreme variants of ellipses; wider, thinner, smaller, etc. It's a bit of a weak area here, as you tend to lose confidence in your lines during these (It's an issue most people have so don't worry.

Ellipses in Planes:

Very similar to the tables of ellipses exercise; Good confidence and consistency. As said above, the more extreme variants you struggle with a bit more to fully fit the ellipse properly, but practice makes perfect. Just try and keep that variety going and you'll have a good proficiency all-around.

Funnels:

Ellipses are looking decently fit and symmetrical! and confidence still only wavers during the more extreme variants, so nice! As expected, it can be difficult to nail each ellipse as you go outwards from the center (Considering the subtle size changes). There are a lot of different variables that go into this exercise; Consistency, continuously changing, symmetry, consistent angle... Yea, a lot. So be sure to revisit this exercise for practice/warmup, since it covers so many basic foundations for the course!

Plotted Perspective:

Nothing to say here. Only advice is that this makes an awesome reference when dealing with perspective, so you should hold onto it!

Rough Perspective:

Boxes are looking good, but there's only 1 noteworthy issue: You traced the points back to the VP instead of following your drawn lines! This isn't a big deal, as it still gives you information whether you were close or not in regards to perspective, but it's not as useful. From our points, we should be extending our boxes, so we can see where they would actually vanish along the horizon, and how far that differs from the intended VP. It's a lot easier to discern than tracing back directly to the VP and will be used a lot later on. If you're confused as to what I am talking about, take another look at the exercise reading (Near the end, before the mistakes portion).

Rotated Boxes:

Super solid work! You're using each edge well as a guideline, giving your next box a general frame, which makes your perspective look nice and consistent. I can also see that as you went through the exercise, you got a better understanding for how it all works and how it's all supposed to go together. The exercise is meant to be hard, and forcibly dives you in to give you a general understanding of perspective and 3D in a 2D space, which is exactly what you did. Just keep what you learned here, and do your best to apply it in future scenarios!

Organic Perspective:

You have a good, consistent change in size as you move throughout the trail, and all the perspectives are pretty good and hit the mark. Confidence never seemed to lack anywhere, and you varied with the boxes decently. I can see some distortion with some boxes, but those will all get hammered out when you tackle the 250 Box Challenge. Solid job!

Summary:

You have good confidence, are applying all the skills/methods being taught consistently and accurately, and have an awesome understanding of the course material thus far. I'm only going to ask for a revision of the rough perspective; This is solely because the tracing-back will be used extensively after this, and will be extremely useful in determining how you're doing in regards to perspective.