Some thoughts for people aiming lower than top-notch instructions... One upside to photography - it usually takes the least effort. But the results are nearly always not as good as possible. If you create an LDraw or LDD file, you can always share the file itself, and people can interact with the model directly. That avoids effort on the author's part to generate print-like step-by-step instructions.
And it removes even more frustration by offering direct feedback. You don't have to know the drawing to make decisions about your own image. How about creating an LDD model, in Photoshop? This method is much more powerful. Here are my preferred methods for creating LDD files: Creating a Draw File with Photoshop (or another software that can render LDD files) Importing the LDD file into the software (a .STL) Importing the LDD image into the software (a .TIF file, but you can convert it to .tiff) Selecting the LDD layer, and selecting the appropriate “Render to LDA” button to make the picture the model. Once the LDD layer fills the size with the canvas in the application you use, select the LDD layer. Select either the LDD layer in the drawing area (with the LDD layer selected all the way up the layer chain) or, in Photoshop (right click),.