Here's the thing about yearbook spreads—they're basically the DNA of your entire yearbook. You've got two facing pages to work with, and what you do with that real estate determines whether students flip past quickly or actually stop to relive a moment. We're not talking about slapping photos onto pages and calling it done.
The real goal? Make someone who wasn't even at homecoming feel like they missed out. Create layouts that pull readers in and keep them there. When you nail the hierarchy, balance your elements properly, and build deliberate visual paths, you turn a random collection of photos into something people actually want to look at years later.
Think of your spread as one continuous panorama, not two separate pages that happen to sit next to each other. That's your canvas for mixing photos with headlines, body copy, and captions—all working together to tell one coherent story about an event, a group, or a theme.
But documentation alone won't cut it. You need engagement. How do you get it? Strategic design decisions that tell readers exactly where to look first, what to check out next, and how all the pieces connect. Visual hierarchy is your roadmap here—typically your biggest photo grabs attention first, then supporting images, then text fills in the details.
Size matters enormously in photo spread composition. Make everything the same size and you've created visual noise. Nothing stands out. The spreads that actually work? They fea...