
Our Houston retro logo features the longhorn and Lone Star, symbols of Texas resilience and ambition. The longhorn evokes frontier toughness and ranching strength, while the star reflects independence and pride. Black-and-white styling feels authentic and vintage, echoing rodeo posters and industrial signage. On merchandise, the motif communicates durability and authenticity, not polish or flash. It bridges Houston's cattle heritage and modern space identity, embodying toughness and ambition alike. Just as Houston transformed from swamp town to Space City, the logo reflects strength and resilience in vintage style, honoring the city's layered Texas heritage.
Today Houston is Texas's largest city and a hub of energy, aerospace, and culture. Its story blends bayou grit, oil wealth, and suburban optimism with space-age ambition. Our Houston designs celebrate this layered identity, pairing the longhorn and Lone Star with vintage styling. They invite you to explore the Houston collection and carry forward a reminder of resilience and ambition. Retro in tone, the motif honors Houston's roots and its evolution into a global city, perfectly reflecting Texas strength and independence. Explore Houston's collection and share in a story of frontier grit and innovation.
Why People Visit Houston Texas
- Tour NASA Johnson Space Center and Space Center Houston, with spacecraft, mission artifacts from the Apollo and Shuttle programs, and views into the historic Mission Control room.
- Walk Buffalo Bayou Park, the green corridor along the bayou with skyline overlooks, kayak access, and bridges connecting downtown to the Heights.
- Visit the San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site twenty-two miles east of downtown, where the 1836 battle won Texas independence — the 567-foot San Jacinto Monument is taller than the Washington Monument.
- Tour the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, holding broad collections and rotating exhibitions in the city's museum district.
- Visit the Houston Museum of Natural Science, with dinosaurs, gems, paleontology, and planetarium shows in Hermann Park.
- Walk through Sam Houston Park, the historic district downtown that preserves the city's oldest 1820s-1900s buildings on the original townsite.
- Relax at Discovery Green, the twelve-acre downtown park with lawns, public art, and water features.
- Visit the Menil Collection, the modernist museum complex designed by Renzo Piano that opened in 1987.
- See the Rothko Chapel, the 1971 interfaith chapel housing fourteen Mark Rothko paintings.
- Walk The Heights, the historic Victorian and Craftsman neighborhood just northwest of downtown.
- Attend the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo every February-March — the largest livestock show and rodeo in the world, drawing more than 2.5 million attendees annually since 1932.