Howdy! I can see you are putting in your head rotation practice reps, that's great! I did just three heads but I hope that those will still illustarate my points and will be educational. First we have full front one. This one is easier in terms of volume (which there is none) so the main struggle here is symmetry. Make sure all your single facial features are placed on the midline and your paired ones like eyes, ears, cheeckbones and the angle of the jaw are placed on the same level. Eyes are very interesting case since they are also have to be placed one eye-width away from each other, so correct placements and measurements are very important here. Ears are usually start on the eye/brow level and go down to the nostrils level. Also, don't forget the side part of the head: you can see a small portion of the temples from that view, so put some space (or hair!) between corners of the eyes and ears. Now to the measurements. They are basic and rarely change if you are not doing cartoonish or stylized work but those are clearly studies so this is not your case. Make sure you follow the thirds rule: hairline-eye/brow, nostrils-eye/brow, nostrils-chin. All of those distances have to be the same size. And the mouth is usually a little bit higher than the half-distance between the chin edge and the nose. Few words about a three-quarter view. That's a challenging one, I sympathise with your struggles but you have to understand that you can't expect to just jump right into drawing faces from an angle. You have to learn to feel the volume first. And to do that, you have to learn your spheres since the cranium is a sphere. You need to learn some cubes (yes!!!) because until you can draw a cube receding in space you can't understand a plane of a face foreshortening in space. But you are on the right track. Asaro head is your best friend for the next few lessons, and the less complex the planes will be, the better. And don't forget to take a picture every once in a while and FLIP IT. Good luck, you are doing great C: | Artwod Feedback