Then, click in the Height field and you'll notice that the dimension changes maintaining the same proportions. Then select this Width value by dragging across and type 0.2. So, with the circle still selected click this option to constrain the Width and Height, meaning if you change one value the other changes proportionally. Specifying values can ensure precision and also lets you see a shape's dimensions and any transformations already applied to that shape. In the Properties panel which you see here on the right you can change the shape’s width, height, rotation and a lot more. Next, you'll transform a shape by entering specific values in the Properties panel. Now that's one way to transform shapes visually by dragging. Then drag it on to the center of the flower shapes on the right. Now make sure your circle is about this big and then release the mouse button. Drag a handle on the corner of this box and as you drag look for these crosshairs in the center, they tell you it's a circle. If you see Hide Bounding Box, you're all set. If you don't see the Bounding Box choose View, Show Bounding Box. You can transform artwork in different ways by dragging these handles. Now with the shapes selected, notice the box around it with these handles. To zoom into the artwork, choose View, Zoom In and do that a few times so that it's a little bit closer. So, select the Selection tool in the Tools panel on the left. First, you'll start by resizing some content. You can open this file from the practice files if you'd like to follow along. So, let's take a look at some of the ways you can apply transformations to artwork in this project to complete it. In Illustrator you can transform content by rotating, moving, scaling and more.