Hi Welcome to OPF, your work is beautiful and glamourous
Here are my first impression thoughts of the 1st set
Lovely model, very beautiful with a relaxed demeanor that leaves her very approcahable. I am a big fan of the Laddie style which your lighting exhibits here quite nicely and while I also am a proponent of breaking rules and creative crops I feel like the only real detractors in this set is the crops and maybe some minor adjustments to the poses.
#1 Shot just a few MM wider gives you a beautiful full body shot, to me I see no compositional advantage to cropping the hand, the knee, the head and the foot. I can see recomposing and cutting the hand at the wrist but the middle of the fingers really does not work so well for me.
Another option would have been to alter her pose ever so slightly, simply rolling the hips toward the lens a bit would have brought the feet down and the knee up then sliding the hand up to the top of the table and just curling the edge of the top with the finger tips would have brought the full hand in. Of course these are minor aesthetic options that while they would work to my eye might not to the next guy but for me as it is the eye simply is given too many opportunities to exit the image at the crop points as they break the line and flow of the image.
# 2 again I would have gone just a touch wider and included the full breast.
#3 Gorgeous shot but the loss of the top of the mask is too me a significant loss as the mask is an important element in the shot. Introducing a prop that is so elegant and eye catching and then cropping it as you have simply does not provide an advantage that I can see and if anything it distracts me.
#4 Simply stunning but again such a small crop that gives no real advantage. For me the crop should direct the eye and entice to continue to explore what the image has to offer but when it does not offer this advantage it only invites me to exit the image and move on to the next.
Again here I would have had the model roll her hips toward the lens to continue the curve and add additional depth and dimension to the image.
I know these are all small points but to me it is the small details that can have the greatest impact on the effectiveness of an image. These are the details that separate nice pictures from exceptional images. Sadly I find it is often easier for me to spot the small details after the fact as I personally have to remind myself to slow down, come out of the view finder and look for those details on an all to regular basis.
I look forward to seeing more of your work