Fashion / Instagram of the weekFashion / Instagram of the weekThe Instagram account for erotica, gore, subcultures, and sins@opi4te is curated by 18-year-old student and aspiring visual artist Eloisia ZefiShareLink copied ✔️May 7, 2018May 7, 2018Text Brooke McCord @opi4te Vintage erotica, fashion obscurities, forgotten subcultures and cultural sins sit alongside one another on the @opi4te feed, @dazedfashion’s Instagram of the week. The account is run by Eloisia Zefi, an 18-year-old aspiring visual artist based in Milan. Currently in the twelfth grade, when Zefi’s not in class, she spends her time watching cult films and trawling Google images. More often than not, it’s the results of such late night searches that populate the account, that counts stylist Lotta Volkova as a follower. Zefi started the account to fulfill her desire for a judgement free zone. “I wanted to create a place where I’d able to share things without having to abide by any rules or a set criteria,” she explains. “My relatives and my schoolmates followed my personal account, so I felt I wasn’t able to post what I wanted.” Describing the account as “an eclectic bunch of images that describe moods and share random art, my personal achievements, and experiences”, when it comes to selecting images to post, Zefi explains, “they simply have to fulfill my vision”. The account itself takes its name from American rock band Tool’s EP, “Opiate”. “It’s a song I relate to and I love opiates,” says Zefi. Meanwhile, the account bio simply reads “cruda”– a combination of the words “crude” and “crud”. Scroll through the feed and you’ll find cult gore film stills – from a shot of Rose McGowan’s amputated leg on the set of Planet Terror, or a blood-covered still of Italian actress Veronica Lario taken from culy thriller Tenebre – erotic works by American photographer and director Roy Stuart, avante garde artworks like Rebecca Horn’s Pencil Mask and obscure forgotten fashion pieces. But when it comes to the post that Zefi relates to most, it’s this one. “This account has allowed me to discover a lot of artists and visionaries like me and it enables me to feed my fantasy,” says Zefi when about the positive impact of starting her new account. “I have to admit, I feel like there are many accounts like mine so I don't think of it as special. I don’t try to hard, I like to just let it flow.” @opi4te Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingKylie Minogue on her pop legacy and partying with Jonathan AndersonExclusive: We sit down with the Australian pop icon to chat personal style, Fever at 25, and her starring role in JW Anderson’s latest campaignFashionBeautyNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismOakley FashionGoing ‘field mode’ with Roger ScottLife & Culture‘She was secretly the landlord’: Readers on their housemate horror storiesLife & CultureThe case for wiping your Instagram gridArt & PhotographyThe most loved photo stories of April 2026Film & TVWhat do sex workers actually think of Euphoria?MusicN0rth4evr: Every track on North West’s new EP, rankedFashionTechno-fascist fashion: Why Silicon Valley is moving into menswearEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy