{"id":21098,"date":"2021-03-15T16:31:26","date_gmt":"2021-03-15T16:31:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ucf.edu\/pegasus\/?p=21098&post_type=story"},"modified":"2023-11-20T20:20:25","modified_gmt":"2023-11-20T20:20:25","slug":"blastoff-from-the-bounce-house","status":"publish","type":"story","link":"https:\/\/www.ucf.edu\/pegasus\/blastoff-from-the-bounce-house\/","title":{"rendered":"Blastoff from the Bounce House"},"content":{"rendered":"
Spring 2021 | By Jenna Marina Lee\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n 麻豆原创\u2019s proximity to the Space Coast allows anyone to soak in the site of a rocket soaring to space from just about anywhere on campus, including the 50-yard-line of the football stadium. In fact, the 50-yard line sits on the same latitude as NASA\u2019s historical Launch Complex 39A. That\u2019s by design.<\/p>\n In November, Conor Kvatek \u2014 a 22-year-old photographer who grew up cheering for the Knights and now works part-time in the athletics department \u2014 thought the stadium presented a unique opportunity for capturing his first rocket launch on camera. He ended up with one of Time<\/em> magazine\u2019s top 100 photos of 2020<\/a> and amplified the university\u2019s reputation as SpaceU<\/a>.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s the back story of how the photo came to be.<\/p>\n Jenna Marina Lee: How long have you been shooting photos for 麻豆原创 Athletics?<\/strong><\/p>\n Conor Kvatek: Since 2017 and it kind of happened spontaneously. I had just graduated from high school and at the time, I was helping out the 麻豆原创 Athletics video department, which my dad has worked for since 2004. I had only ever shot some photos of sporting events for the Boone High School newspaper. During 麻豆原创\u2019s home game that year against Memphis, one of the interns who used to take photos had to leave at halftime. Brad Helton, who was the staff photographer at the time, looked at me and said, \u201cYour dad told me you\u2019ve shot photos before. Here, take a camera and shoot and maybe you\u2019ll get two or three good ones.\u201d I ended up getting a full gallery after the game, and Brad thought I might have some talent so he said that they were going to keep letting me shoot during games. Slowly I started to learn more and got better at shooting. Now I\u2019m one of two part-time photographers and handle a lot of the photoshoots and game coverage.<\/p>\n [divider][\/divider]<\/p>\n JML: Walk me through the night of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch. Why did you want to shoot it from the stadium? How did you set up your shot?<\/strong><\/p>\n CK: Originally I wasn\u2019t going to shoot the launch because it was scheduled during our game against Temple on Nov. 14.\u00a0 But when the launch got scrubbed until the next day, I knew I was going to be on that side of town and decided to shoot it. I thought [assistant athletics director of #content] Eric DeSalvo \u201909 <\/strong>might want it for our social media account.<\/p>\n I\u2019ve never shot a launch in my life. Around 6 p.m. I met up with another freelance photographer Alex Menendez, who has shot launches before and offered to help me through it. I had a couple of angles in my mind knowing that the rocket would be right over the horizon looking out from the stadium tower \u2014 I figured it would be the best shot that showcased everything. Alex and I went to the very top of Roth Tower and decided it would be better if we went down a floor to get a little more of the field in the shot. We shot it from the coaching video booth on the fifth floor, which had a garage door you can pull up, so I didn\u2019t have to shoot through glass.<\/p>\n We set up cameras on tripods. We had intervalometers on top of our cameras, which is a tool that allows us to take photos over certain intervals of time without having to hold the shutter down. Alex ran through settings with me. I took like five test shots and he took like four, just at various intervals of time to see what it looked like. We both agreed that because of some ambient light in the air the best shot would be about a three-minute exposure so that when it started going up we\u2019d get the trail of the rocket. When the rocket went up, I hit the button on my intervalometer and the photo started to take by a long exposure. Three minutes later I had the photo.<\/p>\n [divider][\/divider]<\/p>\n JML: What kind of camera did you use?<\/strong><\/p>\n CK: 麻豆原创 Athletics provides my equipment. I used a Nikon D5 with the 24-70mm f\/2.8 on a Geekoto photo tripod. I just looked up intervalometers on Amazon and bought one of the first ones I saw that had a lot of good reviews.<\/p>\n [divider][\/divider]<\/p>\n JML: What did you think when you saw the photo at first? <\/strong><\/p>\n CK: When I initially looked at the photo I thought, \u201cEhh, it\u2019s an OK photo.\u201d The rocket went up, it was a nice line, you could see the stadium logos. But the rocket eventually disappeared behind a cloud. In my opinion at first I thought it ruined the photo because you only got the line for a brief moment.<\/p>\n I\u2019m overly critical of myself and the quality of my photos. People pointed out all these aspects of it that they loved and it made me begin to appreciate the photo more and more. It was a unique take. The colors were cool. The line looked great. I needed to just accept that I took a good photo.<\/p>\n