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PICS OR IT DIDN'T HAPPEN

There’s a saying — mostly tossed around online — that goes: “Pics or it didn’t happen.” It’s a joke, sure, but also a kind of truth in a world where documentation feels like validation. If it’s not posted, saved, or screenshotted, did it even matter?

That question sat at the heart of the 2023–2024 edition of Le Flambeau. This theme challenged the staff to think about what we choose to remember, how we tell stories visually, and what gets left out of the frame. It also leaned into the fun of it all — the selfies, candids, camera roll outtakes, and layered nostalgia that comes with documenting high school life.

Visually, the book echoed the language of modern media: "gridded" social interfaces, tagging systems, photo dumps, and image-forward layouts. Students explored how identity is captured and curated — both for others and for ourselves. What’s performative? What’s personal? And what will actually be remembered?

This edition of Le Flambeau was created by a sharp, expressive, and fiercely creative team of 13 students, led by two Editors-in-Chief who guided production with insight and clarity. Their challenge was to tell a year's worth of stories through the lens of image and memory — and to create a book that felt as real and vivid as the moments themselves.

Scroll on for more behind-the-scenes glimpses into Le Flambeau: Pics or It Didn’t Happen.

Theme development

Every yearbook has a theme. For this year's staff, the feeling was a little sentimental. We had several ideas and brainstorms as a group - everything from a clean magazine style look to a full collage scrapbook look before we settled on something in between. They wanted the freedom to doodle, to show off their photography and to really tell the stories that make the school and their experience in it special. Therefore, "Not Yet Written" was born.

Read the full theme copy below

Not Yet Written Opening Theme

Illustrated Secondaries

The goal on every spread is to cover each event

or season uniquely. For sports, that means not only reporting on the results of the season, but looking for special team traditions or moments within. I love this short additional coverage on

the gremlin stuffed animal the track team brought to meets. 

Not Yet Written Track & Field

AUTHENTIC ACTION PHOTOGRAPHY

Sometimes the best photography is when the subject is a little sweaty, a little sad, a little wild. This prom spread highlights strong action photography, especially since at events with low light like dances, the photographer must use the flash in addition to navigating manual settings.

Not Yet Written Prom

four-color cover

This year was special in that the editors chose to customize covers and endsheets for each class. The designs were the same, but seniors received pink books, juniors got green ones, sophomores got orange and freshmen picked up blue yearbooks.  

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specialized typography

This particular book's theme was "Not Yet Written" and the students chose to go for a more scrapbooked, handwritten look when we could. A student on staff, Gabel, has unique handwriting which we turned into a font and typeface and used throughout the pages.

Not Yet Written New Construction

THREE EDITORS

Sometimes the best photography is when the subject is a little sweaty, a little sad, a little wild. This prom spread highlights strong action photography, especially since at events with low light like dances, the photographer must use the flash in addition to navigating manual settings.

Not Yet Written Prom

The last few years have felt like a rough draft.

Something, a certain pandemic shall we say, left everything a bit off.

Before, it was writer's block, but now? Now we are inspired. We came together in the fall ready to face our first "normal" school days in three years and to flourish our traditions back to the way they used to be.

But just like any great story, it started with a hook.

And there were notes in the margins and red pen struck through the things that weren't working. The writing process, just like life, includes continuous demolition and construction as a way to grow and learn from the past.

The truth is, it all begins with an outline. A Foundation.

This year it was a literal foundation change. We sat in makeshift classrooms, hearing the violent noise of a drill or hammer in an almost never-ending pattern over lectures and projects. Science labs were performed between black curtains in the Grande Salle. A writer can't write without a touch of wifi, which was sorely lacking in the fall.

 

Shakespeare never had to deal with hotspots, did he?

 

But despite the setbacks, we kept the vision.

 

Theology director Jessica Hull organized a fleet of vans delivering student volunteers all over the city for orientation week.

 

The Storm Stomp basketball tournament came back to campus with Willy Wonka and her Oompa Loompas taking home the knockout championship, the Founding Ballers dressed best, and sophomores winning the 3-v-3 tournament. Altogether we raised over $16,000 for student scholarships.

 

The Chiefs won the Super Bowl and we kicked off that weekend with an impromptu pep rally involving a sea of red and yellow.

We hosted the International Student Conference on Kansas City soil, inviting tweens, teens and teachers from Australia, Brazil, Canada, France and the UK to a traditional American pep assembly and "Eco Prom." We were told our high school experience was "just like the movies."

We aren't sure we totally agree with that. But we know one thing.

Our high school experience is full of stories.

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Each year, each tradition, each event and each day hold stories.

Every hour can hold a new chapter.

The time we spent planning, recording and stitching together our experiences was only a fraction of what we actually lived.

Life at Sion is more than one single story.

Honestly, there is too much to tell because it's not just about this year or this special place...

It's about what's not yet written.

NYW Theme Copy

Valerie Crook

COMMUNICATIONS PROFESSIONAL | MULTIMEDIA STORYTELLER | EDUCATOR

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