I've got a pretty decent Israel collection, but I purchased it mostly intact. Meaning I bought albums with stamps already mounted in them. At my age (71), I've done that more and more, partly because I've got a sneaking suspicion I'm not going to have nearly enough time to mount all the stamps I've purchased one-by-one, and I'd like to see some albums completed at times. My albums are White Ace Israel albums, some with pages for stamps with tabs, some without. White Ace went out of business late last year (2018) but recent news says it was purchased and the new owner plans to re-issue their pages. So it may be a viable option for Israel albums.
I like
White Ace albums with a few caveats about them. I like the information provided for each stamp. The layouts are common sense and uncrowded. The pages look very appealing to me. I don't like the small 8.5 x 11" page size or the schoolboy (and schoolgirl!) three-ring binders much at all. But they are nice albums. Not at all cheap, though.
Other options for an Israel collection are the usual --
Lighthouse and so on. Check their website.
Schaubek might sell an Israel album and so might
Davo. They are all very nice albums, but you will pay a LOT of money for them. Often collections in these high-end albums are worth less than the albums they're mounted in. No kidding. My favorite albums for reasonable price and good quality are
Scott Specialty albums. I'm sure they have an Israel album that would work just fine - and not be extremely expensive. More money for Stamps! Check the website of "Amos Advantage" which is Scott.
Buying an Israel collection on
ebay or at auction would give you the stamps and the albums, and that's always thriftier and a lot easier than the alternative.
As Germania says, Israel stamps can be collected with tabs or without. Stamps with tabs are at least a little more sought after, and more valuable, due to their being less common, appearing to be more "complete," and having the extra info on the tab. To me, that's not a big deal (and I don't read Hebrew, anyway) so I collect both. Israel has a pretty good stamp issuing policy with not too many issues per year and most stamps having some useful purpose, something to consider about any country you plan to collect. There are quite a few countries which over-issue stamps, and it can get tiresome to deal with that.
Good luck -- and have fun.