I voted for Painted by elimination.
I'd like to be a lot more specific about this, because my taste varies greatly from author to author.
I'm in love with Tite Kubo's style:
Whatever you wanna name it… I really don't know how to name that, but I don't consider it to be "generic manga". Just... manga.
I mean, let's compare it to the closely related Naruto and One Piece... Masashi Kishimoto's style is also really distinctive, I personally like it a lot in a different way... and even though I'm not that fond of One Piece as a story and its artistic style is not my thing, I consider Eiichiro Oda's style to be extremely original. Probably the most original of the three.
They're nothing alike, and we're talking about three of the most popular shonens of all time here, as mainstream as they are/were within the same genre AND even published together in the same magazine... I still can't label their styles in any way. That's why I don't care about labels, generalized styles, genres and stuff (not just in manga).
Recently I came across this one, and it kinda blowed my mind. It's from Samurai 8, by Masashi Kishimoto (Akira Okubo as the illustrator).The manga itself is usually not colored, naturally, but the line art is just as good.
And then there are things like this:
Which I absolutely love despite it still being so short.
Because black and white is not an actual style or bunch of styles in manga. It's done that way because manga is supposed to be cheap to both produce, print and consume, by definition. The same way you don't say that cinematography uses a camera style. (Maybe it's a bad example w/e)