Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia | Federal Bureau of Investigation | Federal Communications Commission | Federal Aviation Administration | United States federal judge | Federal government of the United States | Canadian federal election, 2004 | Federal Emergency Management Agency | Australian federal election, 2007 | stained glass | Distrito Federal | Federal Trade Commission | The Glass Menagerie | Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia | Federal | Through the Looking-Glass | Canadian federal election, 2006 | Canadian federal election, 1993 | Canadian federal election, 1988 | Federal District (Brazil) | Federal architecture | United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit | Chancellor of Germany (Federal Republic) | Canadian federal election, 1984 | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | Canadian federal election, 2000 | Mexican Federal Highway | Federal Highway Administration | Canadian federal election, 2008 | glass |
In July 1932, she opened her own office at 185 Madison Avenue in New York City with a retainer from Quaker and started designing houseware products for Libbey Glass, Federal Glass, US Glass, Towle Mfg. Co., Maryland Plastics, and Bakelite Corp. Five years later, she traveled throughout Europe to study trends in Scandinavian design and by 1939 found herself at the forefront of modern design in the United States.