She worked with many artists, among whom were Maurice Denis, George Desvallières, Marie Alain Couturier and Jean Bazaine; as well as architects Paul Tournon, Pierre Pouradier-Duteil, Maurice Novarina and Auguste Perret.
[1] Huré has been credited with producing the first set of stained glass using an abstract aesthetic, to be seen in her 1931 work at the chapel of the seminary of Voreppe.
[7] She was also the inventor of a technique, called brique Huré,[7] for which she received a patent in 1930.
Huré was proud of her independence in a field dominated by men, and she was frequently seen smoking a pipe.
[1] Her studio-house in Western Paris was two doors from that of sculptor Dora Gordine, both having been designed by Perret.