
Today Pasadena is a big, diverse Houston-area city — majority Hispanic, proud of its strawberry past, its Western nights, and its working waterfront. Its days run from bayou mornings to refinery shifts to festival weekends, all under the wide Gulf sky. Our Pasadena designs gather that into wearable form. Wear the history. This is the Strawberry Capital — and where the urban cowboy rode.
Pasadena itself was brand new when the strawberries arrived. In 1893 a Galveston developer named John H. Burnett laid out a townsite on the prairie southeast of Houston and, taken with the green of the place, borrowed the name of Pasadena, California. The railroad reached it in 1894, and the settlement grew as a farming community — strawberries above all, but also cantaloupe, figs, and the fragrant cape jasmine — supplying the Houston markets just up the road. For its first decades Pasadena was a quiet country town on the edge of a growing city.
Why People Visit Pasadena
Pasadena balances big-city access with Gulf-coast ease. Visitors pair the strawberry and Western heritage with bayou boardwalks, festival weekends, and a short hop to Houston, the Space Center nearby, or the beach. It is friendly, unpretentious, and family-oriented, with year-round appeal in its parks, trails, and public spaces. History and everyday culture sit side by side here in a welcoming way.