--- title: 05· Objects ---
Objects are items that you can place in the viewport. Boards, shapes, texts, paths and graphics are objects. The following describes the different objects that you have available in Penpot, and how to get the most of them.
A Board is a layer typically used as a container for a design. Boards are useful if you want to design for a specific screen or print size. Boards can contain other boards. First level boards are shown by default at the View mode, acting as screens of a design or pages of a document. Also, objects inside boards can be clipped. Boards are a powerful element at Penpot, opening up a ton of possibilities when creating and organizing your designs.
You can create a board using the board tool at the toolbar or the shortcut B.
Set a custom size or choose one of the provided presets with the most common resolution for devices and standard print sizes.
TIP: Create a board around one or more selected objects using the option "Selection to board" at the menu or the shortcut Ctrl/⌘ + Alt + G.
There are two different cases in terms of selecting boards:
Select a specific board to be the file thumbnail that will be shown at the dashboard in the file card.
To set a custom thumbnail:
Boards offer the option to clip its content (or not).
Boards offer the option to be shown as a separate board/screen in the View mode. Use this setting to decide what boards should be shown as individual items in your presentations.
Defaults
As it is very likely that the first level boards will be used as a screen and the interiors will not, there are different defaults for newly created boards.
Sometimes you don’t need the artboards to be part of your designs, but only their support to work on them. Penpot allows you to decide if the fill of an artboard will be shown in exports, you just have to check/uncheck the "Show in exports" option which is below the fill setting.
You can set guides on boards that will assist with aligning objects.
Read more about guides.
You can connect boards with other boards to create rich interactions.
Read more about prototyping.
Rectangle and ellipses are two basic “primitive” geometric shapes that are useful when starting a design.
The shortcut keys are E for ellipses and R for rectangles.
To find out more about how to edit and modify these shapes go to Layer basics.
To insert text you have to activate the text tool by first clicking on the icon at the toolbar or pressing T. Then you have two ways to create a text layer:
Press Enter with a text layer selected to start editing the text content. You can style parts of the text content as rich text.
The curve tool allows a path to be created directly in a freehand mode. Select the curve tool by clicking on the icon at the toolbar or pressing Ctrl/⌘ + c.
The path created will contain a lot of points, but it is edited the same way as any other curve.
A path is composed of two or more nodes and the line segments between them, which may also be curved. To draw a new path you have to select the path tool by clicking on the icon at the toolbar or pressing P. Then you have two ways to create the path:
To finish the path:
Tip: If you hold Shift/⇧ while adding nodes the angle between the current and the next will change in 45 degree increments.
To edit a node double click on a path or select and press Enter. You can choose to edit individual nodes or create new ones. Press Esc to exit node edition.
There are two types of nodes: curve or corner (straight). The type of a selected node can be changed at the bezier menu. Curved nodes have bezier handles that allow the curvature of a path to be modified.
There are several options for inserting an image into a Penpot file:
Images fill the layer backgrounds by default, so they take up the entire object while maintaining the aspect ratio. This is great for flexible designs because the images can adapt to different sizes.
However, if you don't want an image to keep its aspect ratio when resizing, you just have to uncheck the option in the image settings.