Congratulations!
I don't have the pictures as you were asking but cannot recommend highly enough the 'Heathkit' type of component by component instruction that is is the link below (if I don't goof it up). I did the check boxes too, which made me feel even more confident and that I hadn't missed anything.
Please sort them to make sure they are all there. I just did my Efield antenna last night and getting a bit tired yet wanting to be on line today, found it helpful to know where I left off. I also printed out the portions of the 'official' manual showing the larger than life boards with their components marked on them, and the color picture to make sure that I wasn't mistaking an axial inductor for a mere resistor.
I know there are some pointers to soldering in the threads here, too. I got a really bright light on my work bench and then borrowed my wife's magnifier that she uses for cross stitching. It all helps and makes one much more confident.
http://www.carsonvalleyweather.com/blitzortung/docs/Blitzortung-RED-Assembly-Instructions.pdfI am really pretty compulsive about not wanting to have to take a component out of the board, so I check and recheck, especially resister values with an ohm meter before putting it in. That slows me down, but I feel comfortable doing it that way.
Also, read the comments about having a good fine needle nose pliers available to help make a non-stress bend in the axial components such as the resistors and some of the inductors.
The only part I fluxed were the pads of the surface mounts. I got a little bottle of flux and did those pads, and while it made for having to clean the board with alcohol (from the pharmacy, not single-malt) it make the pre-tinning of one of the pins to solder it down to hold it in place a breeze.
I know one of the guys here uses solder PASTE, but I think a really fine rosin core solder does just fine. And the official document recommends against it, I think because some of the through the board holes get solder in them and might bridge.
A very clean tip on the soldering iron, good pressure to heat the joint (so make sure the board isn't just floating free).
And I think there is a soldering course review posted here just to go over basics and to let people practice a bit too.
If I can find that I'll link here, too.
http://www.lexingtonwx.com/html/soldering.htmlalthough Al is trying to get it to be hosted somewhere else, I think that link will work for you.
All I can tell you is that to be organized and pace yourself will serve you well. Even having completed the major part of the build a few months ago, I was a wee bit hesitant but after getting the surface mounts in place, the rest was a breeze and a little music and no visual distractions helps best for me.
Good luck. Please keep us posted.