HomeGuy! Glad kismet has finally ended you up here!
I looked at the older photos on your profile page. That was some crappy medium they were originally in, and likely why they were failing. Putting them into new medium (good looking medium, btw) has been their saving grace. As info, next time you repot don't get too carried away washing off roots. Generally speaking, if it doesn't shake off under a stream or spray of water, leave it. I presume when you were cleaning, you may have stripped off rotting velamen from root (the yucky part, with a wiry inner stem in the middle). Until you get a really good feel for growing, don't cut roots.
They all are looking better in the pictures on this thread as opposed to when you took some of the original pictures on your profile. I presume all "before" pictures taken about the same time in January when you were repotting? All look dehydrated now, but looked worse back in January. They are recovering, but it will be a slooow process. Nothing happens quickly in the orchid world, for the most part, especially better growth.
Do you normally keep them in a cache pot, or just "as is" the way they are in the picture? With those slitted pots, consider putting them into a loosely fitted cache pot. Take the slitted pot out, water, drain, then replace in the cache pot. That will help retain moisture, but they still have air flow. Or consider grouping them in around some other houseplants...that helps keep humidity levels up.
Phalaenopsis (all the genus of yours) don't need to "dry out" but also don't want to be soggy. Hopefully with some of the clear pots they're in now, you will see part of a root here and there down inside the medium. When it gets silvery colored, time to water. That's the easiest way for a beginning grower to know when it's watering time.
Generally, keep the coolest temp they see at around 65F and the highest they see 85-90F. Doubtful they need any more light than they're receiving. They can tolerate shade a whole lot better than they can too much light. I wouldn't worry much about humidity; it isn't one that cares nearly as much about humidity as many genus do.