The sheet contains a series of portrait sketches of 29 images of women's and children's faces, half-figures, and figures, executed in a soft academic manner. Most of them are variations on the theme of full-length portraits of young women, complemented by images of children of various ages. The composition lacks strict symmetry and is more akin to a sketchbook by an artist who studied types, facial expressions, and anatomy. The faces are presented from different angles, including front view, three-quarter view, and profile, which indicates the artist's deliberate study of form. Most of the images retain a sense of chamber restraint, with barely noticeable emotion or inner concentration. Some of them are likely exercises in copying pictorial sources, a typical academic practice. There are examples of a freer interpretation of the image, where an attempt is made to capture the mood or psychological state of the model. A separate portrait of an elderly woman or man with clearly marked signs of ageing does not stand out from the others in terms of its plastic richness and desire to convey the texture of the skin, which complicates identification and accurate attribution. Some of the images reveal features of academic realism, closely related to the portrait tradition of the 19th century, where chiaroscuro modelling emphasises the volume and structure of faces. A series of children's images is characterised by soft lines, a lightness of gaze, and a certain immediacy (as seen in the head of a boy with a twisted face and the figure of a child with a raised leg) – all of which lends them emotional polyphony. On the reverse side of the sheet are two figurative studies of nude female models: one depicts a woman sitting on her haunches, while the other is in a dynamic pose with her knee resting on a chair. Both images are distinguished by anatomical accuracy and careful attention to proportions, which corresponds to the character of a training drawing from life. Also on the reverse side is a knee-length drawing of a man in military uniform (probably in sepia), which is less detailed but retains a careful attention to the characteristic details of the silhouette and posture. In general, it can be said that the drawing represents a comprehensive educational and studio practice: from portrait analysis to working with figures, demonstrating the artist's ability to work with both emotional nuances and plastic anatomy.