During a relatively brief period as a regular singles competitor, Fadjrin won the
1980 IBF World Championships in Jakarta over fellow countrywoman
Ivana Lie. She had been runner-up to Denmark's
Lene Køppen at the
All England Open Championships that year. She won the
Southeast Asian Games title in 1981 and the
Indonesia Open in 1982. Most of her early titles in women's doubles were in partnership with
Imelda Wiguna. Together, they won the
Asian Games (1978), the
Danish Open (1979), the
Canadian Open (1979), the
All England (1979), and the
Southeast Asian Games (1981). They were runners-up at the
World Championships in 1980, and Fadjrin was runner-up at the
1982 All England with another fellow countrywoman
Ruth Damayanti. Following a hiatus in her international badminton career from 1983 to 1985, Fadjrin enjoyed impressive success in her late twenties and early thirties. She shared the women's doubles title at the
Indonesia Open in 1986 and 1988, and finished second with
Ivana Lie at the
World Grand Prix Finals in 1986. Her greatest success late in her career, however, came in mixed doubles, which she had rarely played earlier. She won the 1986 and 1988
Malaysia Opens with
Bobby Ertanto and
Eddy Hartono respectively. In 1989, Fadjrin and Hartono won the
World Grand Prix Finals, and the
Dutch and
Indonesia Opens together. They also reached the final round of the
1989 IBF World Championships in Jakarta, but could not overcome South Korea's
Chung Myung-hee and the formidable
Park Joo-bong. Fadjrin led
Indonesian Uber Cup (women's international) teams that finished second to
Japan in
1978 and
1981, and to
China in
1986. Of the seven matches won and the fourteen matches lost by Indonesia, collectively, in the final rounds of these three competitions, she was involved in six of the wins and only three of the losses. She also helped
Indonesia win the
Sudirman Cup (combined men's and women's team championship) over
South Korea in 1989, her final year of international play. == Achievements ==