Your heater wires...are they deliberately "up in the air" as opposed to being next to the chassis? When wiring my P1 I couldn't help but think that using 3-dimensional space ought to offer advantages over thinking of the chassis as a 2D space. Am I over thinking this?
IMHO you're not "over-thinking" at all. For me, it's important to think in terms of 3 dimensions for your layout and lead dress.
HBP has it exactly right in terms of me copying the BF Fender approach to layout for the heater wires. IIRC Marshall lays the heater wires flat on the chassis and tucked up against the back corner, similar to a Tweed Fender. However, that puts 'em closer to any controls and/or jacks on the back side of the amp. If it weren't for the reverb jacks, I'd probably do it Marshall-style. Since the reverb send & return are very sensitive parts of the circuit, the heaters are as high "up in the air" as I could get them.
While we're hi-jacking this thread, the color-coded wiring emphasizes a couple of other "principles" I follow for lead dress. The blue plate wires go straight down to the chassis, lay flat on the chassis, and are kept away from other things (high voltage & high current). Orange grid leads (where not shielded) are in the air and perpendicular to anything else because they're the most sensitive to interference (low voltage/low current). Yellow cathodes aren't as critical, but I try to keep some separation.
Another example of 3-D separation is the blue leads from the tremolo Intensity pot to the board in
This Shot. They go almost straight up off the board and are kept away from everything else, especially the tone controls & related leads (white, between pots). I'd had problems with hearing tremolo noise interference and this physical separation seemed to help.
Sorry for going off topic.
Chip