Abigail Klein Leichman
January 8, 2015, Updated December 6, 2020
Berlin-based photographer David Meskhi took shots of ordinary people wearing Maya Bash clothing.
Berlin-based photographer David Meskhi took shots of ordinary people wearing Maya Bash clothing.

When fashion designer Maya Bash began renovating a grimy auto-parts store in Tel Aviv’s Gan Hahashmal (Electric Garden) district eight years ago, she could not have known that the crime-plagued neighborhood would become “the second sexiest neighborhood on earth” according to Thrillist — and a go-to destination for international fashionistas .

Drawn by the low rents, she and other avant-garde young designers banded together as Collective 6940, brainstorming funky and fresh events to help turn the seedy quarter into the desirable location it is today.

As they meet success in Israel and abroad, many of these designers are moving elsewhere. Bash, however, is content to keep her shop and studio on Barzilay Street, about a mile south of where she lives.

But that doesn’t mean her business is stagnant. On the contrary, the 35-year-old designer has made a modest name for herself among buyers at Paris Fashion Week. As a result, her minimalist, deconstructed garments are sold in about 10 boutiques in Japan, Italy, Russia, Denmark, The Netherlands and the United States in addition to Israel.

Bash with one of her favorite items, a washed beige jacket with hand-knit lining. Photo by Abigail Klein Leichman
Bash with one of her favorite items, a washed beige jacket with hand-knit lining. Photo by Abigail Klein Leichman

Last year, she launched an ecommerce site to make her collections available to anyone with a credit card. That decision came from her head rather than her heart.

“I’m not an online person,” Bash tells ISRAEL21c with a ready smile. “I like to go and touch things; I’m very old-fashioned. I buy music CDs and magazines even though I could read them online. But you have to challenge yourself when you own your own business, and I’ve had the shop and studio for eight years. I really don’t want another shop because I see how much energy it takes.”

That’s a lesson she learned through experience. A few years ago, two German women entered her store and announced they wanted to open an Israeli designer shop in Berlin. Bash and several other designers in Gan Hahashmal were chosen to realize this dream.

“After six months, they came to me and said, ‘Most of the clothes we’re selling are yours, so let’s turn it into a brand shop.’ It was really good. We went to Berlin and reconstructed the shop and it was open for a year,” says Bash.

 Bash’s Pioneer Jumpsuit. Photo by Roni Cnaani
Bash’s Pioneer Jumpsuit. Photo by Roni Cnaani

“But then I gave birth to my daughter and it was very hard to manage my shop here, let alone the one in Berlin. It was a great experience but it was too much. So we closed it.” Many of her loyal clients from Berlin have become online customers.

Person becomes design

Bash agreed to meet with ISRAEL21c during the afternoon hours she spends in her store before fetching her three-and-a-half-year-old daughter from nursery school. She wears a dark gray oversize T-shirt silk-screened with the drawing of a child.

“Tel Aviv is a small city, and I often see people wearing my designs. I wanted to capture some of these characters,” she explains.

Maya Bash’s recently launched kids collection. Photo by Irina Kaydalina
Maya Bash’s recently launched kids collection. Photo by Irina Kaydalina

Bash asked visual artist Zoya Cherkassky to create stylized, whimsical sketches based on a dozen of the people she had seen wearing her clothing. The sketches were then hand-printed onto fabric and made into garments for women and kids.

“I love the nature of this cycle; a person buys my clothes and then becomes the next design,” says Bash.

Bash also collaborated recently with photographer David Meskhi to create a photographic project in Berlin featuring “interesting people,” rather than professional models, wearing her designs. And with director Max Lomberg, she produced the short film Wardrobe, “a metaphorical representation of my thoughts about fashion design.”

The freedom to play

The Maya Bash children’s line, still new and limited, gives its creator much satisfaction. “On small clothes, the detail stands out much more,” she says. “Designing for children is such a special pleasure. I have the freedom to play and exaggerate everything.”

But she stays far from glam and glitter. The mostly unisex clothing Bash designs is basic above all.

“My style is simple, minimalistic and deconstructed. I work from the body’s anatomical lines. I really work in an old-school way, on paper. I’m not a trendy designer,” she says.

The most expensive item in Bash’s current collection is a NIS 4,300 ($1,120) leather jacket with a hand-knit lining peeking out underneath, while the least expensive is silk-screened underwear for NIS 90. Leggings cost NIS 290, T-shirts NIS 370 and trousers NIS 590.

Bash says designing for children is a pleasure.
Bash says designing for children is a pleasure.

Trained at the Shenkar College of Engineering and Design, Bash favors natural or organic fabrics such as cotton, alpaca and linen imported from Japan, but is not averse to incorporating viscose, polyester and nylon where she deems it appropriate, especially for outerwear.

Additional components are on her drawing board. “I want to continue on to shoes and accessories,” Bash says. “You cannot just stay in a comfortable zone doing what you know how to do.”

She tries to balance her desire for growth with her insistence on remaining a small, made-in-Israel business. Most of the production is done in a factory near Rehovot, and samples are sewn in her Tel Aviv studio, where her mother does some of the hand knitting.

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