One Of One Porsche 911 S T Funky Minty Shows How Extreme Sonderwunsch Can Be
Porsche’s Sonderwunsch programme exists for customers who want more than options and paint samples. It is the brand’s highest level of factory personalisation, where one-off commissions turn already rare cars into singular design statements. The latest example is a bespoke 911 S/T created for Italian designer and Porsche collector Luca Trazzi, nicknamed “S/T Funky Minty”.
At its core, Funky Minty is based on the highly sought-after Porsche 911 S/T, a model already limited to 1,963 examples worldwide. Porsche positions the S/T as a modern analogue 911, pairing a naturally aspirated 4.0-litre flat-six with a manual gearbox and a lightweight chassis philosophy that prioritises driver involvement over technology overload.

A One-Off Exterior And Interior
The Sonderwunsch team finished Trazzi’s car in a custom Mint paint, contrasted sharply with white accents across the front bumper, a centre stripe running over the bonnet and roof, plus white window trims, mirrors, door handles, and centre-lock wheels. The result is playful but deliberate, standing apart from the more restrained specifications most S/T buyers have chosen.
Inside, the mint theme continues. Mint highlights appear across the dashboard, steering wheel centre line, door panels, gear lever, carpet surrounds, and the custom carbon bucket seats. A backlit sill plate reading “S/T Funky Minty” confirms its one-of-one status, reinforcing that this car exists outside Porsche’s standard catalogue.

Trazzi’s Sonderwunsch Track Record
Funky Minty is not Trazzi’s first deep dive into factory customisation. In 2024, he unveiled a one-off 993-based 911 Speedster finished in Otto Yellow, a car that drew attention because Porsche never produced a series-production 993 Speedster.
Trazzi also commissioned a final-production 992 911 Dakar in a bold mix of Signal Yellow, Gentian Blue, and Lampedusa Blue, further underlining how Sonderwunsch customers are using color and design to create rolling calling cards.
The 911 S/T is already trading well above its original MSRP, and Sonderwunsch commissions like Funky Minty push exclusivity even further. For Porsche, this reinforces a strategy focused on ultra-high-margin personalisation. For collectors, it shows how factory-backed one-offs are becoming as culturally significant as traditional limited editions, much like rare Turbo models and Speedsters.

