[3] Throughout the 1930s, she continued to draw cartoons for magazines like the English-language Zhongguo Zhisheng ("Voice of China") and Jiuwang Ribao ("National Salvation Daily").
[4] In 1955, Yu Feng was deputy editor of the magazine Xin Guancha ("New Observer") when it held a fourm on the future of Chinese fashion.
[5] Beginning in the early 1940s, Yu Feng and Huang Miaozi were part of a group of artists, writers, and other cultural figures in Shanghai and Chongqing later known as "The Layabouts Lodge" (Erliu Tang 二流堂).
[1][2] After the Tiananmen Square Massacre in 1989, Yu Feng and Huang Miaozi moved to Brisbane and became Australian citizens, but the couple later returned to China.
[2] In 2011, the Selected Essays of Yu Feng was published,[7] which contained articles reflecting on her work in cartooning, art, and fashion.