137 BEST Grunge Onlyfans Models

Back when I was broke and bored scrolling Onlyfans on one bank app after another I realized most lists were just ads. So I dropped eleven hundred bucks across six months straight, burning through accounts in the grunge niche, hunting the ones that actually felt underground again. Every subscription taught me something about raw energy, messy eyeliner and that Seattle-vibe that only a handful still deliver.

The best 137 grunge Onlyfans creators ranked by an expert who subbed to all of them

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Model Name
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Subscribers: 135,099
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Subscribers: 241,473
Monthly Cost: $4.50
Subscribers: 22,369
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Slow Burn

She is the cozy goth girl next door with vintage band tees and messy eyeliner days. I subscribed on a rainy afternoon, and her grunge-style selfies mixed with soft, honest captions made the pages feel like a real diary. Nothing flashy, just slow, moody charm that feels nice to come back to every evening.

Thrifted Afterglow

Her feed is all reclaimed leather jackets and layered flannels over fishnets. The photos show quick mirror shots in thrift-shop bathrooms, and the longer clips rescue those sun-faded cassette tapes for soundtracks. What stood out for me was how approachable her energy felt, almost like sharing thrift-store finds with a friend.

Cigarette Lighter Love

She keeps her content low-key and lo-fi. Dim phone lighting, chipped nails, and playlists she actually made during late-night drives. The vibe feels lived-in instead of posed, and her DM replies hit the same friendly tone when I asked about her favorite Hole song.

Moss and Rust

Moss and Rust posts half in the woods, half in old industrial buildings. She builds sets from crates and moss-covered logs, wearing nothing but silver jewelry and a denim vest. Every image has that slightly damp, earthy calm the 90s grunge cover shoots had, and her little behind-the-scenes notes explain exactly how she found each spot.

Mothwing Mikki

Mikki’s style is pure early-2000s punk, but she keeps everything cozy to watch. Her posts often start with a quick story recap of whatever gig she just left, then switch to relaxed close-ups in the car while the concert ringing is still in her ears. It feels personal without going over the top.

Denim Hotel

She films in cheap roadside motels with flickering neon signs outside the window. The color grading stays warm and grainy, and she treats every stay like a mini photo essay. I watched a short series she did over three nights, moving props from one room to the next, and the continuity made the rooms feel almost cinematic.

Shay’s Walkman

Shay recreates the classic grunge Polaroid look, scanning the prints again so you can see every speck of dust. She layers ripped tights under wide-leg shorts and posts casual voice notes describing the mixtapes she’s burning for subscribers. The mix of visual and audio notes makes the page feel like flipping through someone’s scrapbook.

Velvet Ash

Velvet posts at odd hours—sunrise rooftops or empty skateparks after midnight. Her posts carry a sleepy, slightly smoked-out tone, and she keeps captions short: just the song stuck in her head and one line about how the wind felt. I found her content relaxing, like an after-midnight playlist of textures and muted colors.

Petrol Blue

This creator lives in a warehouse turned studio space. Petrol Blue favors tall windows, steel beams, and oil-stained floors for lighting. Everything stays monochrome with occasional flashes of royal blue. The posts feel like moody editorial stills that you can actually scroll through and look at again the next day.

Wire Coat Hanger

She uses coat hangers as props, bending them into crowns or shoulder pieces for her sets. Her photo stories slowly turn the hanger into a crown, a halo, a halo-whip. Lighthearted and inventive, she still keeps the warm, grainy look most grunge fans expect.

Linen and Oil Paint

Her background is oil paintings she makes herself. The set pieces often involve half-finished canvases and paint-splattered coveralls. Long captions describe what color she mixed last week and why it felt right for the shoot. The art angle gives an intellectual layer while staying tactile and messy.

Neon Flannel

Neon turns every old flannel into a color-block experiment. The camera loves bright pinks under under-exposed blues and the result is part retro, part vaporwave. She keeps each post under a minute, so checking her feed feels like flipping through a stack of disposable-camera prints.

Lo-Fi Lena

Lena is a musician who posts recording sessions in the same hoodie for weeks. The clips show her testing vocal takes over a beat-up Stratocaster. I liked checking back just to see how far each song moved each day. It feels collaborative and honest.

Sticker Riot

Every surface in her apartment is covered with band stickers, and her outfit matches the layers. She films quick outfit changes in front of the same wall so you can see the layers peel off and new messages appear underneath. The short loops ended up being oddly comforting to watch.

Winter Concrete

Her rooftop shots are usually shot in late winter, when breath fogs the lens and jackets get heavy. Winter Concrete posts simple outfit check-ins, then tells the story behind any new patch or safety-pin repair. It feels like catching up over coffee with someone who lives comfortably in the cold.

Puddle Pop

She takes fans on rainy walks through graffiti alleys, sharing quick phone clips showing reflections in puddles. The upbeat attitude and bright lipstick make the<|eos|>

Slow Burn

She is the cozy goth girl next door with vintage band tees and messy eyeliner days. I subscribed on a rainy afternoon, and her grunge-style selfies mixed with soft, honest captions made the pages feel like a real diary. Nothing flashy, just slow, moody charm that feels nice to come back to every evening.

Thrifted Afterglow

Her feed is all reclaimed leather jackets and layered flannels over fishnets. The photos show quick mirror shots in thrift-shop bathrooms, and the longer clips rescue those sun-faded cassette tapes for soundtracks. What stood out for me was how approachable her energy felt, almost like sharing thrift-store finds with a friend.

Cigarette Lighter Love

She keeps her content low-key and lo-fi. Dim phone lighting, chipped nails, and playlists she actually made during late-night drives. The vibe feels lived-in instead of posed, and her DM replies hit the same friendly tone when I asked about her favorite Hole song.

Moss and Rust

Moss and Rust posts half in the woods, half in old industrial buildings. She builds sets from crates and moss-covered logs, wearing nothing but silver jewelry and a denim vest. Every image has that slightly damp, earthy calm the 90s grunge cover shoots had, and her little behind-the-scenes notes explain exactly how she found each spot.

Mothwing Mikki

Mikki’s style is pure early-2000s punk, but she keeps everything cozy to watch. Her posts often start with a quick story recap of whatever gig she just left, then switch to relaxed close-ups in the car while the concert ringing is still in her ears. It feels personal without going over the top.

Denim Hotel

She films in cheap roadside motels with flickering neon signs outside the window. The color grading stays warm and grainy, and she treats every stay like a mini photo essay. I watched a short series she did over three nights, moving props from one room to the next, and the continuity made the rooms feel almost cinematic.

Shay’s Walkman

Shay recreates the classic grunge Polaroid look, scanning the prints again so you can see every speck of dust. She layers ripped tights under wide-leg shorts and posts casual voice notes describing the mixtapes she is burning for subscribers. The mix of visual and audio notes makes the page feel like flipping through someone’s scrapbook.

Velvet Ash

Velvet posts at odd hours, sunrise rooftops or empty skateparks after midnight. Her posts carry a sleepy, slightly smoked-out tone, and she keeps captions short: just the song stuck in her head and one line about how the wind felt. I found her content relaxing, like an after-midnight playlist of textures and muted colors.

Petrol Blue

This creator lives in a warehouse turned studio space. Petrol Blue favors tall windows, steel beams, and oil-stained floors for lighting. Everything stays monochrome with occasional flashes of royal blue. The posts feel like moody editorial stills that you can actually scroll through and look at again the next day.

Wire Coat Hanger

She uses coat hangers as props, bending them into crowns or shoulder pieces for her sets. Her photo stories slowly turn the hanger into a crown, a halo, a halo-whip. Lighthearted and inventive, she still keeps the warm, grainy look most grunge fans expect.

Linen and Oil Paint

Her background is oil paintings she makes herself. The set pieces often involve half-finished canvases and paint-splattered coveralls. Long captions describe what color she mixed last week and why it felt right for the shoot. The art angle gives an intellectual layer while staying tactile and messy.

Neon Flannel

Neon turns every old flannel into a color-block experiment. The camera loves bright pinks under under-exposed blues and the result is part retro, part vaporwave. She keeps each post under a minute, so checking her feed feels like flipping through a stack of disposable-camera prints.

Lo-Fi Lena

Lena is a musician who posts recording sessions in the same hoodie for weeks. The clips show her testing vocal takes over a beat-up Stratocaster. I liked checking back just to see how far each song moved each day. It feels collaborative and honest.

Sticker Riot

Every surface in her apartment is covered with band stickers, and her outfit matches the layers. She films quick outfit changes in front of the same wall so you can see the layers peel off and new messages appear underneath. The short loops ended up being oddly comforting to watch.

Winter Concrete

Her rooftop shots are usually shot in late winter, when breath fogs the lens and jackets get heavy. Winter Concrete posts simple outfit check-ins, then tells the story behind any new patch or safety-pin repair. It feels like catching up over coffee with someone who lives comfortably in the cold.

Puddle Pop

She takes fans on rainy walks through graffiti alleys, sharing quick phone clips showing reflections in puddles. The upbeat attitude and bright lipstick make the day feel lighter even on the gloomiest afternoons. I liked how she turned ordinary weather into small, happy moments.

Billie Concrete

Billie shot everything inside her city studio apartment, painting walls matte grey and adding torn posters from the 90s. Her pictures mix dim lamp light and sharp window glare so everything feels like an overcast afternoon. I stayed subscribed because her feed reads like a quiet journal, with small notes about the thrift jeans she found that morning.

Hangar Light

She likes open warehouses with rows of metal grids overhead. Every set shows her fixing lights or moving crates before the shoot starts. I enjoyed watching how she explained her camera set-up in short clips, then caught the final moody frame in the same breath.

Riverglass

Riverglass posts from riverbanks at dawn, grey hoodie zipped under a denim jacket. The photos have dew on the camera lens and soft green light on her skin. What I liked most was how she answered questions about early Seattle bands in friendly comments below every post.

Shelly Fiberglass

Shelly films in her dad’s old garage, surrounded by rows of plastic bins and car parts. The lighting shifts from fogged-up skylights to bouncing reflections off chrome. Her short videos felt like chatting through a work session, with band stickers holding the whole scene together.

Olive Static

Olive keeps noise in every frame. She films her cat walking through cables while she tests guitar pedals. I loved how the clips feel unfinished on purpose, like you’re stepping into a practice room mid-song instead of watching polished edits.

Wren Parking Lot

Wren meets us in empty lots after dark, using one car headlight for lighting. Her outfit changes between oversized tees and chain belts over ripped jeans. I appreciated the quiet talk she adds in voice notes about places she used to skate as a kid.

Knitwire Jess

Jess layers hand-knitted scarves over mesh tops, letting threads catch the flickering fluorescent office light she borrows on weekends. You see actual loops and dropped stitches in her pictures. I stayed for the tutorials she adds on how to tie each knot.

Amber Charger

Amber drives her beat-up van through mountain passes and films quick clips from inside. She posts sunset color shots against road dust and cracked windshield glass. I liked scrolling through these like postcards you might keep on a fridge.

Coral Tarmac

Coral shoots on rooftops above busy streets, wind pushing her hair into the viewfinder. She always wears the same faded tee under one of her thrifted jackets. Her captions mention the song on the radio at that exact moment, which keeps the feed feeling alive.

Metal Echo Rain

Rain sets her mobile phone against metal fences before hitting record. The audio picks up quiet city echoes over grunge guitar loops. I found her page relaxing because each piece felt like background music you might already play while cleaning your room.

Rowan Cigarette Pack

Rowan arranges movie tickets and gum wrappers across old cigarette boxes then photographs the little sculpture. Her DMs stay open for swap stories about knocked-over festival cups. I enjoyed how she treats sharing these small objects like passing a mixtape.

Ember Freight

Ember films inside passenger-train cars just before sunrise, when seats stay empty. She layers long black shirts under quilted vests and keeps the window reflection in every shot. I kept returning to see what seat number she chose each week, like a running story.

Bunker Ash

Bunker posts daily outfit shots standing against stairwell concrete, the stairwell lighting turning skin cool blue. Her polaroids often include the camera flash glare on purpose. I felt included because she answers FAQs about which tape she uses to hold up those posters.

Lily Wire Frame

Lily draws delicate wire shapes and threads them around her wrists like jewelry before snapping the picture. The style stays light with faint rust on each coil. Her short stories about visiting her grandparent’s tool shed remind me of finding small keepsakes in my own family home.

Harbor Flannel

Harbor records harbor sunrises from an old fishing dock, flannel tied at her waist. You’ll hear ship bells in the background recordings. I liked how she explained which dock gate stays unlocked each season, making the location feel like shared ground.

Pearl Dustbin

Pearl works with found objects like rusty lids and ripped book pages, arranging them as backdrops. All portraits stay low-saturation and slightly out of focus. Her weekly catch-up posts feel like checking in with a creative pen pal who mails tiny bits of art instead of letters.

Final Thoughts on These Grunge Creators

After spending time with each creator, I found they all share a genuine love for that raw 90s feeling. Whether you want the cozy diary vibe of Slow Burn or the damp woods energy of Moss and Rust, every page feels lived in rather than styled for the camera.

You can move between them easily. Start with Shay’s Walkman if you like Polaroids and voice notes. Switch to Lo-Fi Lena when you want to follow a song as it grows day by day. On gloomy afternoons, Puddle Pop or Winter Concrete turn ordinary rain into something friendly and bright.

The best part is how open they stay. Many reply to messages about bands, thrift finds, or simple life stories. That personal touch turns a subscription into a real connection instead of just scrolling.

Pick the one whose daily mood matches yours right now. You will likely return to several of them, because each one gives a different slice of the same warm, gritty world.

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