>>1876632Sure, but you need to be able to distinguish what was intentional, and what was an error from the artist. You can't keep every little wobble from an unsteady hand of the artist. When you convert it to a vector, those errors that were originally hidden are far too visible. This is why it is generally important to get the major curves to curve to that of the original, and keep the areas between the major curves smooth. What you did on the brown part of the shirt right next to this is actually exactly what you're looking for in a vector. Keep it smooth like that.
You're still missing the white fuzzy part of the glove on her left arm You're also missing a piece of the neck to the left of the face. That piece of hair under her arm that I mentioned in the previous image was unchanged. You always want the tip to be thinner than the shape leading into it, not fatter. The rest is good enough.