![]() But if you hold Shift, then you get a perfectly round circle. The first couple of things were the same as with the square, if you just click and drag, you can create an ellipse of any height and width you want. Now, this one can be a little bit more tricky to wrap your head around how it works. So that covers everything that you need to know about rectangles. ![]() But if you uncheck it, then you can set different values for each one of your individual corners. So it's that one and then the uniform corners box here is checked by default and that means that all four of your corners are gonna be exactly the same. But if you uncheck that, then the corners are gonna stay the size, even as you shrink the shape down or you increase its size. Then the size of the corners is also going to scale proportionately. So with that checked, when you scale the shape, so downshift to get that as a square. Then you could choose what type of corners you want to have, then you have these two little check boxes down here, Autoscale Corners. So you can just drag this little slider to determine the roundness of your corners or you can directly enter a value and then if you, this little button here. In the extra setting that you have to work with specific to the square is this corner setting here and that's a lot like the corner setting that we looked at with the path tools in the last lessons. Once you have your square setup, then the only. I'm just gonna add a border really quickly to this, make it a little easier to see. The dimensions of your rectangle, so you can create a perfect square. Or if you hold down Shift, it'll lock in. So with rectangle tool, if you just click and drag, you can make any type of rectangle you want. Next up, we'll have a look at the rectangle tool. So once again, that's in 45-degree increments. And when you're using a line tool, you can also hold down Shift to do straight lines. You just need a line, then it's quicker to use the line tool than it is to use the pen tool. So if you know exactly what you need, you're gonna need two points. The only real difference is that you don't have to hit Intel. A line is actually a lot like just taking a pen tool and drawing out two points then hitting Enter. If you hit this little drop-down button, then here are the different shape tools that you have to work with and each one of them has a couple of different settings that are available. So the shape tools that you have to choose from are up here. So it makes it much quicker and easier if you wanna do things like squares, and stars or circles, and so on. ![]() So the shape tools are a little bit different to the path tools in that instead of just making up your own shapes, you're working with some predefined shapes. In this video, we're gonna go through some of the shape tools. Hey, welcome back to Graphic Design in QuickStart.
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