
The goddess is moving. Not frozen in marble, not painted on a canvas—she walks, she sways, she inhabits space with a presence that cannot be ignored.
Bhumi, the Dutch label founded by Emma Van Engelen, brings mythology to life, translating the eternal myth of Aphrodite into sculptural silhouettes, 3D printed heels, and ornamental details that celebrate the body in motion. Here, fashion is no longer a pedestal; it is a stage, and every piece is a declaration of self-possession.
The brand’s latest collection, Divine Garden, is an ode to Aphrodite: love, desire, sensuality. But this goddess doesn’t linger in myth—she moves. Sculptural petals, ruffled lingerie-inspired details, and flowing pleats recall marble statues, while new 3D printed heels and sculptural bags—Aphrodite in shimmering blue and Venus in celestial champagne—anchor the collection firmly in the present. Here, mythology meets motion, and the body becomes the canvas.
Bhumi’s revolutionary use of 3D printing allows intricate pleats, delicate floral motifs, and sculptural heels that would be impossible through traditional methods. The result? Fashion that doesn’t just clothe the body—it celebrates it. Divine Garden is a statement: the modern goddess is embodied, self-possessed, and unapologetically alive.
For Emma Van Engelen, Bhumi is more than a label; it’s a manifesto.
After a decade in fashion, witnessing unattainable beauty standards firsthand, Emma set out to create designs that empower every body, turning adornment into agency. With Divine Garden, she shows us that true style is not about perfection—it’s about presence, movement, and reclaiming your space.









