In one of the more enduring decisions of their young lives, Michelle Lynch and her teammates opted to go with "the flow."
Instead of posing for the kind of standard team photo that inevitably ends up in a drawer somewhere, Lynch and her Maple Grove lacrosse mates spent a half-hour in a bathroom, spraying and teasing and poofing their hair, then augmented the 'dos with stern, steely stares.
The photo "turned out great," Lynch said. "It's a weird kind of team bonding, I guess, but it worked."
While high school teams still pose for standard yearbook shots -- Maple Grove's included the "flow" but with smiling faces -- many teen teams over the past five years have moved toward "themed" photos.
"The biggest trend by far is more of those types of photos," said Dan Leitch, who took the lacrosse team shots. "Six or seven years ago, you never saw that."
In that vein, Leitch, who owns Prep Sports Photography with sister Kathy Gibson, might find themselves at a Medicine Lake beach shooting the Robbinsdale Armstrong girls' swim team draped around a large dragon statue, or in "gangsta" poses. Or on a field taking dozens of individual or "buddy" photos, or a set of small-group poses to create a horizontal "composite" poster.
"Parents want something that's more traditional," Leitch said. "Mom might have the same style of photo of all her kids on the refrigerator or a wall and wants all the shots to match.
"But kids themselves want something more offbeat. If that's what you want, we'll shoot it -- as long as you're going to buy some."