Her husband, the Swiss officer Stephen Bruchez of Épinay, preferred she took care of their children, rather than writing.
Yet, she published numerous verses, stories, novels of manners, plays and newspaper articles, including in 1835, several for the Journal des Femmes.
She also wrote the music for a few romances and in 1836, she worked at Biographie des femmes auteurs contemporaines.
Famous under her name as well as under the pseudonyms Ève de Bruchez or Ève de Bradi (sometimes Brady), she owned and was chief editor of the Journal des dames et des modes (5 July 1836 – 19 January 1839).
From 1839, she was responsible for the importante chronique de mode of other magazines for women such as La Sylphide (January 1840 – 1847) and Paris Élégant (1845), as well as the chronique littéraire of the La Corbeille de Mariage (1847–1848) and the Journal des Jeunes Personnes.