I’d reckon she’d hate him for executing her mother and no doubt he contributed to her lifelong self-branding as a virgin, with Elizabeth having seen what a capricious man with power could do to his wife. But I wondered if we have any correspondence or other sources that may allude to her feelings about her father.
In short, the answer is no. We do not know, really. However, what we can say is publicly, she stood very firmly on her father's legacy and his reputation. Henry was much more important for the public symbolism and display of Elizabeth than Anne Boleyn, which makes sense she was only a queen consort and that for a mere few years. There was a clear sense that you were supposed to be on Henry side in the public atmosphere, particularly given he also founded the Church of England. And this lasted after her death into James's reign, who wasn't descended from Henry at all but from Margaret Tudor.
This public stance did extend to the subject of her parent's marriage and the honour of her mother, for example she convinced one of the Medici Dukes of Tuscany to burn a book on the subject by Dominican friar Giolamo Pollini, but this was arguably just in her self-interest to ensure she was seen as legitimate and didn't really touch the subject of Henry turning on Anne. She favoured her Boleyn relatives, but these were descended from her aunt Mary Boleyn, not her mother, and kinship networks were extremely strong and expected in this society. In some ways, given the crucial role played by Catherine Carey as both a lady to Catherine Howard and Catherine Parr, and Elizabeth's first Chief Lady of the Bedchamber, this might be more to do with Carey than her mother. Neither her public stance nor family network is strong evidence for her personal feelings on her mother.
This isn't surprising, since Anne died when she was only a few years old; she hardly knew her. Elizabeth was mostly raised by her caretakers, even Henry who lived into her teens was a somewhat distant presence in her life that she might well have feared given his unstable treatment of her, vacillating between periods of grace and suspicion.
I will note the the actual subject of the Chequers Ring, mentioned in the other reply, is disputed. Some people think it is Anne Boleyn, but there is a strong argument it is actually Catherine Parr, Henry's last queen, a fellow educated Protestant woman and Elizabeth's guardian during some of her formative years. The figure in the ring does seem kind of gingerish, which would be unusual for Anne who is usually depicted and described as dark haired.
You'll probably be interested in this comment by /u/bluebuddha11 which addresses basically that exact question.