Oronti by Soraya Oronti is a fashion brand that merges the aesthetics of the automotive world with a deep interest in mathematical sequences, industrial materiality, and geometrical design. Her work repurposes materials such as car upholstery, rubber mats, and deadstock textiles, transforming them into wearable forms. She also develops latex-based replicas of rigid, industrial textures, layering natural latex over surfaces like car mats to create flexible, body-friendly versions of otherwise unwearable materials.
Oronti by Soraya Oronti is a fashion brand that merges the aesthetics of the automotive world with a deep interest in mathematical sequences, industrial materiality, and geometrical design. Her work repurposes materials such as car upholstery, rubber mats, and deadstock textiles, transforming them into wearable forms. She also develops latex-based replicas of rigid, industrial textures, layering natural latex over surfaces like car mats to create flexible, body-friendly versions of otherwise unwearable materials.
Oronti by Soraya Oronti is a fashion brand that merges the aesthetics of the automotive world with a deep interest in mathematical sequences, industrial materiality, and geometrical design. Her work repurposes materials such as car upholstery, rubber mats, and deadstock textiles, transforming them into wearable forms. She also develops latex-based replicas of rigid, industrial textures, layering natural latex over surfaces like car mats to create flexible, body-friendly versions of otherwise unwearable materials.
Oronti by Soraya Oronti is a fashion brand that merges the aesthetics of the automotive world with a deep interest in mathematical sequences, industrial materiality, and geometrical design. Her work repurposes materials such as car upholstery, rubber mats, and deadstock textiles, transforming them into wearable forms. She also develops latex-based replicas of rigid, industrial textures, layering natural latex over surfaces like car mats to create flexible, body-friendly versions of otherwise unwearable materials.
Oronti by Soraya Oronti is a fashion brand that merges the aesthetics of the automotive world with a deep interest in mathematical sequences, industrial materiality, and geometrical design. Her work repurposes materials such as car upholstery, rubber mats, and deadstock textiles, transforming them into wearable forms. She also develops latex-based replicas of rigid, industrial textures, layering natural latex over surfaces like car mats to create flexible, body-friendly versions of otherwise unwearable materials.