While many people come to the classes to relax with a glass of wine, Lovoy believes that a huge piece of the success of the Sips 'N Strokes model is the way it forces students to speed up their painting. "When you're 28 years old and you see something that was your passion blow up to something so big, it's phenomenal," says the now-43-year-old. Lovoy is amazed at how popular paint-and-sip places have become since she opened her studio. Painting With a Twist recently acquired a competitor, Chicago-based Bottle and Bottega, and the merged companies have a total of 300 locations around the country. "With the increase in the DIY industry, it has really caught on and become popular."īecause the investment needed to start a paint and sip franchise is relatively low, Lewis says, the industry has grown quickly. "It became an industry that the customer base really gravitated to," says Joe Lewis, CEO of the Mandeville, Louisiana-based Painting With a Twist. By 2009, when she franchised Sips 'N Strokes, similar businesses, like Painting With a Twist and Pinot's Palette, had begun springing up around the country. By 2007, Lovoy was squishing 100 people per night into her studio. The business grew slowly at first, going from one class a month to two, and then, suddenly, it was seven days a week. She hoped to transform the painting process from something intimidating and seemingly out of reach to something approachable and fun. "My vision was to inspire the world to create," says Lovoy. Sips 'N Strokes pioneered the model of BYOB recreational painting classes that teach students to reproduce a work of art step-by-step. So in 2003, her company, Sips 'N Strokes, was born. The atmosphere was relaxed and pressure-free. The paintings were coming out great, and classes were filling up. So she began holding two-hour sessions during which she would guide adult students to create an entire painting from start to finish. When Lovoy encouraged them to relax and move more quickly, their work always turned out better. They couldn't get out of their own heads. They were nervous about making them perfect. The adults, she noticed, were taking far too long to finish their paintings. She began teaching adult and kids' classes. In 2002, at age 28, Wendy Lovoy quit her corporate job to pursue a career as a painter. One of the places where it all began was a little studio outside Birmingham. Thousands of franchises now exist to help us all unleash our inner creative. They've become a global sensation - "paint and sip" studios where adults can spend evenings out learning to make art in a relaxed, BYOB setting.