Klink was first engaged by
Karen Warming where she wove long lengths of furniture upholstery. Happy to find something less boring, she immediately took up an offer from Gerda Henning to work on creating tapestries for the parliamentary chamber at
Christiansborg. In order to prepare her for the task, Henning sent her to France where she learnt the art of tapestry under
Jean Lurçat and Pierre Wemaëre. Her stay was cut short when Gerda Henning died in 1951. Her husband, Gerhard Henning helped her to take over the workshop which she later moved to
Tårbæk where she lived. The Christiansborg project fell through but in 1954 she began work on tapestries for Egmont H. Petersens Kollegium in Copenhagen, inspired by William Scharff's cartoons. That year she also began to work for the architect
Mogens Koch, creating textiles for the Danish Church in London,
St Jørgensbjerg Church in
Roskilde and Holbæk Church. In 1954, Vibeke Nielsen married Morten Le Klint (1918–1978), son of the architect
Kaare Klint, with whom she had three children: Peter, Jakob and Le. In the 1960s, Klint created the tapestry
Den barmhjertige samaritan (The Merciful Samaritan) from a cartoon by
Palle Nielsen, for Fredericia Town Hall. In 1977, she designed the main curtain for Gladsaxe Church and in 1979, textiles for Copenhagen's
Vor Frue Kirke. The same year, together with Randi Studsgarth, she organized the groundbreaking exhibition
Danske ægte Tæpper in the Nikolaj Kunsthal, an exhibition venue in Copenhagen, presenting the recent works of Danish textile artists. In the 1980s, she created textiles for decorating a number of churches in Denmark, and for Danish embassies in
Washington D.C.,
Lima,
Paris and
Nairobi. ==Awards==