Here's mine! : D Basically in between every step of my process is "scan it in, change the whole thing to non-photo blue, then print it out and do the next step using the blue as a guide." Since I can remove the blue in photoshop, it helps me make each step more clean.
Thumbnail:
(scan it, print it out blue)
Rough sketch / making sure text still fits:
PERSPECTIVE GRIDSS,,,,,,,, I hate rulers so I do these digitally:
Pencils (scan 'em, print 'em out blue) / Inks (I ink with ballpoint pen for some reason!):
In terms of your question (whether construction adds to style), I suspect that there's probably a chicken&egg element to it -- all of my process is designed to let me make everything tiny and detailed, which results in my style having lots of tiny details, but the whole reason my process works that way to begin with is because I LIKE tiny details, so I gravitated towards a process that would most allow me to work that way.
And a very simplified version of the colouring process -- flat colours, an underpainting (with flat colours slightly transparent over top of it), shading, and like 5 different layers of lighting depending on the scene. xD
This arguably could be a simpler process if I were good at colour picking, but since I'm not, working with a bunch of layers allows me to be a little faster.
And finished product! : >