Let’s not pretend you never heard of mall goths. Whether you bought into it or watched from the sidelines, they have left an undeniable mark—a byproduct of nu-metal’s chaotic reign and the commercial shadows of goth culture. Their look? A patchwork of rebellion and mass production. Their stomping grounds? Chain stores, food courts, and the liminal fluorescence of your nearest suburban mall. Adidas Superstar was everywhere.
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC6477.jpg?v=1733481503&width=1741)
We’re revisiting that energy with photographer Brandon Bowen. Known for capturing the edge of alternative culture—having worked with icons like Marilyn Manson—Bowen’s lens strikes a perfect balance between unsettling and magnetic, making him the ideal collaborator to reinterpret this style for today.
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC7552.jpg?v=1733481504&width=1583)
Think of it as mall goth’s revenge. In the photos you’ll see the Adidas Superstar reclaiming its pedestal, bridging the gap between nu-metal’s DIY grit and today’s opium core precision.
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC7348.jpg?v=1733481499&width=3900)
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC7275.jpg?v=1733481498&width=3900)
This isn’t just nostalgia—this is a refraction of subculture’s fingerprints across decades.
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC6664-Enhanced-NR.jpg?v=1733481495&width=2961)
The shoot layers rough silhouettes and industrial chaos with a sleek, post-apocalyptic edge. It’s a methodical, textured declaration.
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC7172.jpg?v=1733481502&width=2099)
Adidas Superstar, a shoe that’s been through everything from Run-DMC to Hot Topic, is here to remind you it doesn’t just exist in history. It owns space in whatever timeline we’re spinning now.
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC6952-Edit.jpg?v=1733481676&width=3900)
![](http://de.slamjam.com/cdn/shop/files/DSC7150.jpg?v=1733481504&width=3900)