Notes:
Yehuda and Maya's vision for this feature is to depict realistic elements of daily family life in the artistic style and sensibilities of a superhero comic. While there are no age guidelines, the art is discreet when depicting mature scenes and could be considered all-ages. There is only one piece of "mature" language in the entire compilation (in a story title, not dialog).
Throughout the art in this compilation, Yehuda and Ariel both have their share of toys and plushies. These toys often reflect the protagonists' mood--sleepy, shocked, disgusted, etc. and can even participate in the action by lifting, reaching, or flying, and so on. Yehuda's most common pal is a Hulk plushie, and Ariel's is a unicorn plushie.
The real-life Yehuda has created a simple icon logo that approximates his bearded face. This icon frequently appears in the art--on a shirt or hat, for example, as well as the back cover of the book. The dailies collected in this volume from 2016 through 2019 were collected once before for private publication in three volumes in Israel.
Maya Devir's credits, as would be described by the GCD, are not clear from the book's credits. She is described as a realist painter, an art director, and a contributor to this feature's character design. Documentation and external interviews often (but not always) attribute the feature to belonging singularly to Yahuda's art and story-telling. The indexer has elected to attribute art, lettering, and script credits at the story level to Yehuda Devir and script credit to Maya Devir. Therefore, Maya's roles in art direction and character design noted in the foreword are set into the issue-level detail.