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    Tattered Jeans

    The Card Man: Humble arts lover champions handcrafted cards over an army of texts and emails

    Katie Oxford
    Feb 12, 2013 | 9:14 am

    There’s no shortage of passion in Stephen Humble’s life. Flowers, music and art are life forces.

    “I’ve never been able to settle with just one of them,” he explains. “I have to do them all.” So he does.

    After designing floral arrangements at In Bloom, Stephen goes home and designs cards. He paints on textured paper, photographic paper, or art paper using assorted pens from transparent to opaque. Texas Art Supply, where he goes once a week to replace pens, loves him.

    No two cards are alike. “When I make a card, it’s heartfelt and specifically designed for the recipient,” Stephen says.

    It shows. Each card is given a title, which you can read on the back along with the date and Stephen’s phone number all handwritten. No email address here.

    Whether a card serves as a birthday wish, Thanksgiving greeting or a reminder to an elderly person that they are not forgotten, two things are clear in each piece. Time and thought. Heart and hand connection.

    Born in Port Arthur, Texas, Stephen claims that he’s been drawing since he could hold a pencil. At Church, where his father served as pastor, his mother would hand him a hymnal — and a pencil and crayons.

    “Probably to keep me quiet,” Stephen laughs. Along the edges of a page, he might do scroll work or draw flowers, birds and crosses.

    At age three, he sang his first solo in the Church. His father, realizing his musical talent, later bought Stephen a piano. Still later, in other places of worship, Stephen served as the Church musician, playing the organ and piano.

    In first grade, Stephen won an art award from the University Interscholastic League. Using pastels, he’d drawn a squirrel in an oak tree eating an acorn. From then on, he never stopped drawing.

    “My family nurtured my talent my entire life,” Stephen says.

    “With so much computerized correspondence, it warms people’s hearts to receive a personal message in the form of a card.”

    He developed a love for flowers through his Aunt Lois. “She taught me how to see beauty in the tiniest flower like a Bluet,” he explains, his thumb pressing the tip of his little finger. “Beauty in forms like bird’s nests and wasp’s nests. How beautiful things are that most people trample over.”

    He entered Baylor University on a voice scholarship but later became restless. He took a job in Beaumont working as a visual merchandizing person at The White House, which as Stephen described was the Sakowitz of Beaumont. Interestingly, a job offer in the visual department of Sakowitz brought him to Houston in 1977.

    In Houston he was introduced to the floral designer, Leonard Thorpe. Stephen decided then that he wanted to become a floral designer.

    “Leonard had such a flair for flowers,” Stephen says. Two years later, Stephen was working as a designer at Charles Thomas of Houston, a florist shop in the River Oaks Shopping Center.

    In 1985, Stephen moved to Beverly Hills, California and worked for David Jones Custom Florist. He arranged flowers for Nancy and Ronald Reagan and helped in planning one of Liz Taylor’s weddings. He also sang as a soloist at St. Victor’s Catholic Church.

    “It was close to the flower shop,” Stephen adds.

    The Accident

    In 1989, Stephen's life changed dramatically. While crossing the street, he was hit by a car.

    “I flew over the car and cracked my head open,” Stephen reports. The injury caused him to lose his short-term memory but not his ability to draw, arrange flowers, sing and play the piano.

    He entered rehab at Rancho Los Amigos in Downey, California. As part of his two-month rehabilitation, the hospital purchased flowers and set up a flower shop.

    “I taught people how to process flowers,” Stephen says. “They were retraining me without me even knowing it!” Lovely.

    Each card takes from one to three hours to make. Last Christmas he painted 70 to 80 cards and mailed them to loved ones.

    After his rehab, Stephen was homesick for Texas and moved home to live with his parents for a time. He took a job working at Petals, a florist shop in Beaumont. In 1993, he returned to Houston and began working at In Bloom.

    “The rest is history,” Stephen smiles. Interesting history.

    Now at age 58, Stephen has woven a world. Flowers, music and art thread through his life like a loosely plated braid.

    As for his cards, Stephen says, “My mission in life is to maintain the written communication between loved ones. So many texts and email. People are being fired from their jobs . . . proposed to . . . divorcing . . . with text messages!”

    “With so much computerized correspondence,” Stephen says, “it warms people’s hearts to receive a personal message in the form of a card and inscription.”

    Each card takes from one to three hours to make. Last Christmas he painted 70 to 80 cards and mailed them to loved ones.

    One of Stephen’s friends suggested that he advertise his cards on the Internet. Smiling politely as if I’d made the suggestion, Stephen says, “That’s exactly what I’m against. I don’t want to reproduce them. They will not be art to me if they are not personal in nature.”

    Stephen believes that man doesn’t create. He re-creates. “Everything is here!” he says, his hands opened. “Music is in the air. You choose the notes. Colors are in the light and the dark. We choose the ones that we show through our art.”

    Recently, Stephen took his Yamaha keyboard and visited a friend in hospice. After playing "His Eye is on the Sparrow," his friend was grateful. “God kept me alive long enough to hear you sing and to receive your cards,” she told him.

    We are still visiting when Stephen reaches for a pink textured paper like he’d suddenly remembered something. “I’ve been seeing amaryllis in this paper,” he says. Seconds later, he is painting.

    It is time to leave but I want one more photograph. Stephen sits across the table, now resting his arms loosely around a yellow satchel holding art supplies and thank you notes from grateful recipients.

    “These are love letters,” Stephen smiles.

    Indeed. In more ways than one.

    Stephen at work

    9, Katie Oxford, Stephen Humble, February 2013, Stephen at work
    Photo by Katie Oxford
    Stephen at work
    unspecified
    news/city-life

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    retirement news

    5 Houston suburbs deemed best places to retire in 2026 by U.S. News

    Amber Heckler
    Nov 5, 2025 | 9:15 am
    The Woodlands, Houston suburb
    Visit The Woodlands/Facebook
    The Woodlands is one of the best place to retire, according to U.S. News.

    Houston-area suburbs should be on the lookout for an influx of retirees in 2026: A new study by U.S. News and World Report has declared The Woodlands and Spring as the 4th and 5th best cities to retire in America, with three others making the top 25.

    The annual report, called "250 Best Places to Retire in the U.S. in 2026" initially compared 850 U.S. cities, and narrowed the list down to a final 250 cities (up from 150 previously). Each locale was analyzed across six indexes: Quality of life for individuals reaching retirement age; value (housing affordability and cost of living); health care quality; tax-friendliness for retirees; senior population and migration rates; and the strength of each city's job market.

    Midland, Michigan was crowned the No. 1 best place to retire in 2026. The remaining cities that round out the top five are Weirton, West Virginia (No. 2) and Homosassa Springs, Florida (No. 3).

    According to U.S. News, about 15 percent of The Woodlands' population is over the age of 65. The median household income in this suburb adds up to $139,696, which is far higher than the national average median household income of $79,466.

    Though The Woodlands has a higher cost of living than many other places in the country, the report maintains that the city "offers a higher value of living compared to similarly sized cities."

    "If you want to buy a house in The Woodlands, the median home value is $474,279," the city's profile on U.S. News says. "And if you're a renter, you can expect the median rent here to be $1,449."

    For comparison, the report says the national average home value is $370,489.

    Spring ranked as the 5th best place to retire in 2026, boasting a population of more than 68,000 residents, of whom 11 percent are seniors. This suburb is located less than 10 miles south of The Woodlands while still being far enough away from Houston (about 25 miles) for seniors to escape big city life for the comfort of a smaller community.

    "Retirees are prioritizing quality of life over affordability for the first time since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic," said U.S. News contributing editor Tim Smart in a press release.

    The median home value in Spring is lower than the national average, at $251,247, making it one of the more affordable places to buy a home in the Houston area. Renters can expect to pay a median $1,326 in rent every month, the report added.

    Elsewhere in Houston, Pearland ranked as the 17th best place to retire for 2026, followed by Conroe (No. 20) and League City (No. 25).

    Other Texas cities that ranked among the top 50 best places to retire nationwide include Victoria (No. 12), San Angelo (No. 28), and Flower Mound (No. 37).

    The top 10 best U.S. cities to retire in 2026 are:

    • No. 1 – Midland, Michigan
    • No. 2 – Weirton, West Virginia
    • No. 3 – Homosassa Springs, Florida
    • No. 4 – The Woodlands, Texas
    • No. 5 – Spring, Texas
    • No. 6 – Rancho Rio, New Mexico
    • No. 7 – Spring Hill, Florida
    • No. 8 – Altoona, Pennsylvania
    • No. 9 – Palm Coast, Florida
    • No. 10 – Lynchburg, Virginia
    houstonthe woodlandsspringleague citypearlandconroesuburbsus news & world reportseniorsretirementbest places to live
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