I don't want to derail the thread, but I think you're comparing apples with oranges here. I believe the previous comparison was within the context of the '60s and '70s, when big eyes and cute girls were mostly the domain of female artists. Of course, men quickly adopted the style for their waifus and created the coomer concept of moe. On the other hand:
These works date from 50 years after that time. The women in question all worked in the shounen (comics for boys who like adventures and big fights) department in the 2000s, so why would they make it look like classic shoujo? Although, to be honest, compared to male mangaka from that period, you can still kind of tell that these were probably drawn by women, especially Blood C since it's literally just Clamp with their gay dorito faces.
On the sideline, I feel that, thanks to Japanese men aggressively shitting on everything made for women, shoujo and josei are currently in a very devastating state. Young girls, especially fujoshi, avoid creating anything for said demographics' magazines and would rather use a male pseudonym to create their faggot-bait bishonen manga for shounen/seinen magazines. Male-targeted work gets more attention, money, and possibly anime deals, while media for women stagnates in its restrictive cliches. And how can anything improve when all the good stuff and experimentation is given to the male zone?
A lot of currently popular and obviously shoujo manga and anime are published as seinen, just because they do not want to scare away the precious males.
There are millions of female creators ready to suck the male consumer's dick and disparage other women, yet moids still pretend that the game is somehow rigged exclusively against them.