Marie-Anne Leroudier (née Haug; 28 November 1838 – 26 April 1908) was a French embroiderer who received awards at several international expositions.
[3] Two years after her marriage, Leroudier set up an embroidery workshop specializing in the restoration of old fabrics which ensured her reputation with French and foreign collectors.
From 1867, Leroudier participated in all the major international decorative arts events and was awarded an honorable mention at the Exposition Universelle (1867, Paris) as a collaborator of the Lamy et Giraud house of Lyon.
At the Exposition Universelle (1889, Paris), she won a gold medal with the series of panels inspired by the Douze mois grotesques of Claude Audran III.
When the latter was still a young doctor, Leroudier welcomed him each evening at her home where he mastered embroidery, applying the technique to surgical sutures of blood vessels.