She collaborated with her husband, fellow artist Hugh M. Eaton on book-plates and other works of art.
After she studied under J.B. Whitaker in Brooklyn, Eaton attended the Art Students League of New York.
[3] In 1898, regarding her ability as a watercolor artist, it was said that she "had a rare talent for the human, and her socialistic studies like The China Painter and Left for Retrimming, show increasing power from year to year—both in sight and technic.
[5] She and her husband, Hugh M. Eaton, collaborated on their work and shared their Brooklyn workplace, Valhall Studio.
Hugh, who owned a printing press, published illustrations made by the himk and/or his wife.
[6] She created architectural panel designs like Song of Iris for a dining room, nursery, and Even-Song to be placed over a mantel.