She left Australia with a corporate career, a degree in computer science, and a life mapped out in clean, logical lines. But what Angela Gamut carried with her from Melbourne to Kenya was something less measurable. A memory of a village, and a question she couldn’t shake.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!What if a pair of shoes could change a woman’s life?
For the entrepreneur, that question became the foundation of Miriam Bella, a premium women’s footwear and accessories brand quietly redefining what it means to build a fashion label with purpose. At first glance, it is a story of beautifully crafted espadrilles, sculptural sandals and limited-edition woven bags. But at its core, it is something far more profound: a bridge between style and survival, between design and dignity.
Angela grew up in a rural Kenyan village, where her father was the main employer. When he retired, the stability he had created slowly unravelled.
“I would talk to my Dad, and he would tell me how terrible the situation was back home in the village,” she recalls. One story stayed with her. “There was a lady who used to look after my youngest sister. Her grandson had to drop out of school because they couldn’t afford his school fees. And her daughter had lost her casual job. They were living in poverty.”
Those conversations followed her to Australia, where she was building a corporate career. But comfort, she realised, was not the same as peace of mind. She began searching for a way to contribute back home — not through charity, but through opportunity.
The answer came unexpectedly, in a World Bank Group report on East Africa’s leather industry, which suggested Kenya could become a global exporter of high-end leather goods if its production systems were strengthened.
“I thought this idea had potential,” Angela says. “So I went to RMIT School of Fashion and learnt how to make shoes. I started researching where I could source all the components and how I could bring this idea to life.”
What began as research soon became relocation, design development, and an ambitious plan to revive one of her father’s old factories. But instead of importing a ready-made workforce, Angela made a deliberate decision that would define the brand’s ethos. She would train local women who had been excluded from economic opportunity.
It was not an easy transition.
“The community is so patriarchal,” she explains. “The women kept saying, ‘No! This isn’t a job for me!’ But they learnt quickly. People would ask me, ‘why don’t you hire “normal” people?’ but I wanted to employ the most disadvantaged, so I could upskill them and give them a chance for a better life.”
Slowly, resistance gave way to transformation. Shoemaking became a skill, then a livelihood, then a pathway to independence. Today, Miriam Bella employs 15 artisans in Kenya, eight of whom are women. Each contributes to handcrafted collections that blend African heritage with contemporary design.
Every piece is made by hand — from intricate beading to carefully stitched leatherwork — designed not as seasonal throwaways, but as enduring investment pieces. The aesthetic is bold yet considered: neutral tones of black, cream and indigo sit alongside vibrant, African-inspired prints that honour the brand’s origins.
“We make every single piece by hand, hand beading and pouring love into these beautiful products,” Angela says. Even the exclusivity is intentional. “Some of our limited-edition products, like our Bahari Woven Tote Bag, we only made 30, so they are genuinely exclusive.”
But perhaps the most powerful aspect of Miriam Bella is not what is worn, but what is built behind the scenes. Alongside employment, Angela has introduced literacy classes at the factory, teaching English and opening further pathways for independence.
The impact is tangible. One woman has been able to pay for her daughter to attend university to study nursing, determined to break the cycle of poverty. Nine girls have been supported to stay in school. More than 25 households have seen their circumstances transformed.
Artisan beader Emily describes the moment she paid school fees with her own income for the first time. “When I paid school fees with my own money for the first time, I cried,” she says. “I felt so proud.”
It is in these moments that Miriam Bella becomes more than a fashion label. It becomes a system of quiet empowerment, stitched together through skill, opportunity and dignity.
Angela is candid about her intentions. “I didn’t set out to start a fashion brand,” she says. “I wanted to create opportunity and show what’s possible when women are given the chance to thrive.”
In a fashion landscape often defined by speed and excess, Miriam Bella offers something different — a slower, more intentional model of luxury. One where craftsmanship is inseparable from community, and where every pair of shoes carries not just a design story, but a human one.
As the brand grows, so too does its purpose: to expand employment, deepen training, and continue proving that style and social impact do not have to exist in separate worlds.