Problem:
Given square $ABCD$, let $DZ$ be the angle bisector of $\angle ADB$ in triangle $ABD$ (where $Z$ is on side $AB$), and let $DE$ be the angle bisector of $\angle BDC$ in triangle $BCD$ (where $E$ is on side $BC$). Extend line $EZ$ beyond $Z$ to meet the extension of side $DA$ at point $H$. Let $F$ be the intersection of $AC$ and $DZ$, and let $T$ be the intersection of $ZE$ and $BD$.
(a) Prove that quadrilateral $HBED$ is an isosceles trapezoid.
(b) Prove that quadrilateral $AZTF$ is a rhombus.
Context
I was studying the properties of parallelograms and their special cases. While exploring the square $ABCD$, I drew the diagonal $BD$ and constructed the angle bisectors $DZ$ and $DE$ of angles $\angle ADB$ and $\angle BDC$ in triangles $ABD$ and $BCD$ respectively (these bisectors are easily proven to be equal). Extending line $EZ$ beyond $Z$ to meet the extension of side $DA$ at point $H$, I observed that this symmetry transfers to the segments, giving us $DE = BH = DZ$. Furthermore, I noticed that quadrilateral $HBED$ is an isosceles trapezoid.
Subsequently, I observed that due to the parallelism of $HE$ and $AC$ (which follows easily from the first part), the quadrilateral $AZTF$ might be a rhombus, where $F$ is the intersection of $AC$ and $DZ$, and $T$ is the intersection of $ZE$ and $BD$. This would occur if triangles $AZT$ and $AFT$ were isosceles, which I proved using the synthetic approach presented below.
I would also be interested in seeing alternative approaches (analytic geometry, transformations, trigonometry) as well as any possible generalizations.

