Here my first try at it I think it came out very well all but the bottom ground.
Please don't be offended and take this as constructive criticism.
I know this is your first attempt, good it works but next time I'd advise neatening it up a lot, it's far too sloppy. If I designed a PCB like that at work they would tell me to do it again; it wouldn't even be allowed to be manufactured, it would have been rejected at the design phase.
The resistors should all be mounted straight (preferably at right angles) with the leads perfectly straight and no wiggly bits.
What's with the copper wire?
Did you forget to put the traces on? Fair enough these sorts of modifications might be necessary at prototyping phase but it certainly shouldn't be part of the design.
Those holes are far too near the pads, traces and components. You should allow enough room for error when drilling and for any fixings you plan to use: nuts, washers, screws etc.
Also try to make the tracks at 90° or 45° angles and avoid tight corners which tend to etch poorly.
I've put crosses through all the really bad parts. To be honest the rest isn't much better but most could be fixed by forming the component leads correctly and better soldering technique. You've probably got many poor solder joints whcih can't be seen on the photo.
Curious Inventor - Guides : How to Solder
https://www.electro-tech-online.com...dering20Tips20v820BW20Elecraft2009JAN2007.pdf
Unfortunately I couldn't find any tutorials that go into lead forming as much as I'd like.
I tend to make the ¼W resistor leads 0.4" (about 10mm) pitch so I can use veroboard as a forming jig.
You might think I'm being picky but it's important to do a reasonably neat job otherwise fault finding can be very difficult: bad joints can be open circuit and crooked connections can easily short circuit. You want to minimise that risk of errors not maximise it.