Although not as critically acclaimed as contemporaries Margaret Bourke-White or Dorothea Lange, her work broke new ground in Texas.
Later a dark room was built onto the back of a truck, allowing her to drive around the state and develop her work along the road.
Her photographs appeared with hundreds of articles across the country in magazines like House Beautiful, Pictorial Review, Furniture Age, Architectural Forum, and many others.
[2] Today, some of her photos are permanently mounted in the Hall of State at Fair Park in Dallas.
After her work for the exposition, she was commissioned by various corporations to shoot series of pictures on specific subjects, including cotton, cowboys, and oil.