Narin, her husband Turan and their son briefly stopped by their tailor shop to warm up next to a small stove.
"We spent last two nights in our relatives' cars," Narin says, adding they are waiting for her brother in Istanbul to arrive and pick them up.
"This is the only thing I have been eating for the last three days," says Turan, showing a loaf of bread. "No one came to help so far."
Türkiye has requested help from foreign governments to tackle the aftermath of the earthquakes, the strongest of which registered at magnitude-7.7 and struck at 0117 GMT on Monday. Another powerful quake, only slightly weaker at 7.5, hit around noon the same day.
The Turkish disaster authority AFAD said that some 435 aftershocks have been registered.
The European Union has sent 27 search and rescue teams from 19 countries to help look for survivors in Türkiye, EU Crisis Commissioner Janez Lenarcic said on Tuesday, 11 of which have arrived in Türkiye.
The teams are made up of over 1,200 rescue workers, including two medical teams, and over 70 dogs.
The Syrian government, which is under a slew of war-related international sanctions, has appealed to the United Nations, the International Committee of the Red Cross and international organizations to extend a helping hand.
The governments of Saudi Arabia and Qatar joined a growing list of countries to pledge humanitarian support in the form of health, shelter, food and logistical aid to Türkiye and Syria.