She was a children's author and the first professional female illustrator in Spain. The Llotja was formed, and at just 20 years old, she exhibited with the cartoonist Joan Llaverias. During her formative years as an illustrator, she collaborated with children's publications such as El Patufet and Cu-cut! and presented a solo exhibition of a collection of drawings based on stories by Perrault and Wilde. After the publication of her first own work, Contes del Paradís (Tales of Paradise), in 1920, she moved to Paris, where she continued to work on children's illustration and narrative. During the Spanish Civil War she joined the UGT and collaborated with the Propaganda Commissariat of the Generalitat, which published one of her best known short stories, El més petit de tots (The Smallest of All). After the war she abandoned children's books. She continued to work in illustration, however, with publications that generally featured Barcelona and were interwoven with projects in interior design and scenography.
She is the author of children’s stories and the first professional woman illustrator in Spain. During the Civil War, she was affiliated with the TGT and collaborated with the Commissary for Propaganda. Her most emblematic story is El més petit de tots.