When I said that you have a distinctive style that is all your own, I was not referring to a formal artistic style or a specific school of art, etc., rather, I was thinking more of a personal "essence" that is in your pictures. The way you do them has a certain unique quality -- i.e., certain characteristics, which are not really describable in words, but which are visually apparent to me -- regardless of whichever medium or formal "style"/combination of styles, etc., that you are using.
I experience the same thing when I look at numerous pictures by many people-who-make-pictures (be they artists or unlabelled individuals!) -- each person has a uniqueness to their work that can be seen in all (or most) of their pictures, their own essence or fingerprint or personal-style or whatever one wants to call it comes through. Mind you, not all people who make pictures have this: some simply copy what others do, and do not seem to have any distinct personal influence on the results. But, when I walk through an art gallery or an "art" exhibit of any sort in which there are several works by each "artist", I can often easily discern individual and identifiable qualities in all/most of their pieces.
I perceive something similar in some musical instrumentalists: some instrumentalists have a very unique "style", an infusion of themselves into their playing that gives the music a certain quality that nobody else has. Not all instrumentalists have this: some sound like many others, with no personal distinction in their sound. But others put something (a combination of things, certain qualities, intangibles...) of themselves into their playing such that one can often identify them just by hearing something they play.
Of course, there is a possibility (in fact, a probability!) that some of what I perceive as individual uniqueness in the work of others is actually some aspect of myself that is permeating my perceptions: for instance, knowing that a group of pictures are by a certain person, my mind may "see" them in a particular way that I associate with that person, giving them certain identifiable qualities, but there is no guarantee that anybody else sees them in the same way that I do. It is thought that each person perceives everything in a very unique way, for everything that we experience of the outside world (assuming for the moment that the external world exists outside of each of us), must pass through our own unique sensory mechanisms, and then travel through our own unique nerves to our own unique brains, where they are assembled and interpreted as images, sounds, feelings, sensations of whatever sort, etc., and inevitably, some of "us" -- some of our internal selves -- will be intermingled with our perceptions of the outside world.
There is likely some (and perhaps a lot of) similarity in what each person perceives and how they perceive it, because it seems to be the case that we can understand and relate, to some extent, to what other people experience through their senses -- we mostly seem to be living in the same general world/reality, more or less! But, there are undoubtedly personal differences (perhaps greater in some than others), that affect each person's perceptions, for there are so many factors that can contribute to how we perceive things, and what we perceive of them: what we know and have previously experienced, our attention to detail, our degree of sensitivity to various things, our personal biases of any nature, the physical state of our bodies/brains and sensory apparatus, etc., will have an effect on how we perceive the things around us.
I have often met people who cannot or do not perceive things quite the way I do: they do not perceive similarities that seem obvious to me, or they cannot distinguish characteristics that I can easily distinguish -- sometimes it actually seems as though they are seeing or hearing (etc.) something completely different from what I am seeing and hearing. For example, I may see a person who, to me, looks a lot like another person, to the point of being a doppelganger, and yet, if I mention this to someone else, they sometimes cannot see the similarity between the two individuals in question. Or, with colours, I sometimes meet people who think and say that something is green, whereas it is clearly yellow to me -- sometimes the yellow thing in question is actually labelled as "yellow", and yet, a rather large number of people see it as green. There have been times when I have wondered if anybody sees colours in the same way (or perceives anything at all in the same way!), due to the frequent differences of opinion that I have encountered!
Nonetheless, I think that most of us can agree that tomorrow is July 1 -- Happy Canada Day! It is summer for those of us in the northern hemisphere, while those in the southern hemisphere are settling into winter! And so, I will wish everyone a great summer or a great winter, wherever they happen to be! Cheers!