
Denton sits at the northern apex of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, where Interstate 35 splits to run toward the two big cities. Denton County was carved out in 1846 and named for John B. Denton, a frontier preacher and lawyer killed on the prairie in 1841; in 1857 the new county seat took the same name and was laid out around a central square. For its first decades Denton was a North Texas farm-and-trade town — a county seat on the blackland prairie — until the railroad arrived in the 1880s and the colleges came in the 1890s and changed everything.
Today Denton is a college-and-music town that kept its courthouse square and its frontier name — the cultural capital of North Texas, equal parts students, musicians, and county-seat history. Our Denton designs gather that identity — the longhorn-and-star, the 1896 courthouse, the live-music square — into wearable form. Denton, Texas — Little Austin on the square, where the students set the tempo.
Why People Visit Denton
Denton offers the energy of a music town and the ease of a small Texas city — a beautiful courthouse square, a deep live-music calendar, two universities, and a creative streak that earned it the nickname “Little Austin.” It's walkable, friendly, and unmistakably North Texas.