An eight-year-old in California turned a simple drawing into something that will travel beyond Earth.
Lucas Ye entered a global NASA contest and watched his idea rise above thousands of entries from around the world.
Now, his creation is not just a sketch, but a real mascot preparing to float alongside astronauts in space.

Image Source: NewsBytes
From Sketchbook to Spacecraft
Lucas Ye was just eight years old when he decided to draw a mascot for the Artemis II mission, not knowing it would become something much bigger. His design stood out in a global competition, eventually winning and being transformed into a plush named Rise. What started as a simple idea on paper quickly earned a place inside a real spacecraft.
The journey from drawing to physical mascot shows how ideas can move fast when they resonate. NASA took Lucas’s concept and turned it into something tangible, something that could sit beside astronauts on a real mission. It is a reminder that creativity does not need years of experience to matter, it just needs a starting point.

Image Source: Sally Ride Science
A Small Toy With a Big Role
Rise is not just there for the ride, it plays a meaningful role inside the cabin. As the spacecraft reaches orbit, the plush will begin to float, signaling that the crew has entered zero gravity. It is a simple but powerful way to show a major moment in the mission.
NASA has a long tradition of using mascots like this, but this one carries a different kind of weight. It represents a child’s imagination becoming part of a real scientific journey, blending emotion with exploration. Lucas now joins a legacy of space mascots, showing that even the smallest ideas can make it all the way to space.





