
 Photo: Susan Kirschbaum  
While Americans prepared for the Thanksgiving holiday, Tel Aviv kicked  off its first official fashion week at the Hatachana pavilion in Neve  Tzedek with two dozen shows and a special guest appearance by Italian  designer Roberto Cavalli, who re-staged his spring 2012 show. The mixed  bag—offering everything from cut up fetishistic tee shirts to belly  dancers—verged on caricature at times.  The local spice, however, failed  to distract from the (mostly) serious designers.  We spotted four who  have what it takes to break out of the Mediterranean enclave in the  coming year: 
Sasson Kedem 
The 47-year-old Kedem is a Sephardic Jew with Egyptian roots who credits  his ethnicity, big family, and one year at the Ecole Mizrad Avoda in  Tel Aviv with inspiring his architectural dresses of varying layers and  lengths.  Dress as art sculpture—think Issey Miyake or Comme des  Garçons—comes to mind when looking at his mostly black and white  collection. Details included white piping on black collars, sharp  angles and dotted leggings, and a surprise ivory pocket on a fitted  black shirt (pictured after the jump). 
Alembika 
Designer Hagar Alembik Hazofe collaborated with anthropologist Dr.  Judy  Fadlon on the collection of brightly colored, easy to wear draped  dresses seen above. They ranged from body hugging silhouettes to  billowing,  post-holiday perfection and came topped with vests and  capelets.  Stripes, checks, and work shirts turned into the kind of  dress one wears to work, and then out to dinner. To top it off,  Alembika  collaborated with Rem Koolhaas’ shoe line, United Nude, on a  series of  structured pumps.  	

 Photo: Susan Kirschbaum  
Dorin Frankfurt 
Frankfurt studied fashion design in Paris and sold dresses in Covent  Garden before making her way to Tel Aviv fashion week. Club girls in Tel  Aviv  might opt for crazy prints and micro minis, but Frankfurt’s  pumping out clean simple shifts and shapes, well cut jackets, skirts,  and this season’s must have—the cropped pant—in white, black, natural,  and tangerine. 
Pas Pour Toi 
There’s an irony in the French name Pas Pour Toi. In English, it   means, “Not for you,” but the Israeli actress turned desinger, Dorit Bar   Or, is primed to dress her fair share of fashion forward Israelis. Bar   Or, known as “Dodo,” is starring as Peggy Bundy in the Hebrew version   of Married with Children, but off camera she’s considered one of  this  country’s most stylish women; her fashion debut was dedicated to  Golda  Meir, Israel’s only female prime minister. The looks—all black  with  gold embroidery done by an Orthodox rabbi—work strictly for ladies  with  a dramatic flair. Who else could pull off Seventies style plunging   necks with leaf motif? Bar Or spiced up her runway with a crew of   Arabic musicians and a belly dancer, right before hiring a major New   York fashion PR firm.