How small businesses are capitalizing on the booming DIY industry

Where you see a Pinterest project, savvy entrepreneurs see a business opportunity

A workshop at Projects in Person.
(Image credit: Facebook/Projects in Person)

Every month, more than 200 million people open Pinterest, the online pin board website, and start scrolling. While some of them might be looking for fashion tips, or tasty recipes, or design ideas, many are on the hunt for a different kind of inspiration: crafts. From flower boxes to bath bombs to hand-made wreaths, Pinterest is where DIYers go for ideas for their next project. But how many of those painted ombre vases or stenciled barn wood signs actually get created? One budding group of entrepreneurs is helping move DIYers beyond "pinning" to actually "doing."

The crafting industry is worth more than $40 billion, and it continues to grow. Across the country, small businesses are clamoring to secure a piece of that pie, one painted pallet sign at a time. Their plan? To gather wannabe DIYers together — in real life instead of online — in studios and storefronts, and provide them with the tools, space, and social setting they need to bring their ideas to fruition.

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Erica Pearson

Erica Pearson is a journalist based in Minneapolis. A former New York Daily News staff reporter and editor, her work has also appeared in Women's Health magazine, Dow Jones' Moneyish, and Wirecutter, among other publications.