REVIEW · LONDON
London: Bottomless Sip & Paint in the Dark
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Rembrandt van Wine · Bookable on GetYourGuide
You walk in thinking this will be silly. Then the neon paint starts to glow. It’s a paint-and-sip night that’s less about art history and more about getting hands-on, laughing a lot, and leaving with a real canvas. You get guided step-by-step by an instructor and host, even if you’ve never held a brush before, and the event is built for a good mood from the start.
Two things I really like: the bottomless drinks set the tone fast, and the neon glow paint makes your picture look cool even if your drawing skills are… still loading. One thing to keep in mind: there’s no food included, so if you get hungry, eat beforehand and then pace your drinks.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About
- Paint in the Dark: Why This Works So Well in London
- What You Get: Materials, Apron, and the Instructor-Host Team
- Your Neon Setup: Glow Paint, Low Light, and Big Feel-Good Results
- Drinks on the House: How Bottomless Works for the Night
- A Realistic Look at the 2-Hour Flow
- Price and Value: Is $47.99 Actually Fair?
- Who This Suits Best (And Who Might Skip It)
- Tips to Get the Best Night Out of It
- The Social Side: Great for Groups, Great for Solo People
- Should You Book London Bottomless Sip & Paint in the Dark?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About

- Neon glow in the dark paint so your artwork pops under low light
- Beginner-friendly guidance from an art instructor and host, no experience needed
- Drinks on the house including alcoholic and non-alcoholic options
- All materials provided (canvas, brushes, easel, apron) so you travel lighter
- Two hours long which is perfect for a quick London night plan
- Take a true piece of art home after the session
Paint in the Dark: Why This Works So Well in London

London has plenty of classic nights out: pubs, theaters, and late walks with big views. This is a different kind of fun. In the dark, you’re not competing with anyone’s technique or trying to impress a museum crowd. You’re following the instructor’s cues, mixing colors, and watching your neon scene show up in the lightless space.
The magic here is the combo of two ingredients: visual effect and social energy. Neon glow paint gives you immediate payoff, and the room vibe is designed to keep you engaged. Add the fact that the session runs about two hours, and you can fit it easily between other plans without committing to an all-night event.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London.
What You Get: Materials, Apron, and the Instructor-Host Team

You don’t need to bring supplies or worry about being “the non-creative one.” The event includes all painting materials: canvas, brushes, easel, and more. You also get an apron, which matters because neon paint can be messy in a fun way. (Think: your hands might look like you lost a fight with a glow stick.)
You’ll also have an art instructor + host working with the group. The big value is that the instruction is built for people who have never painted. If you’ve only done stick figures, you’re still welcome. The host role helps keep things moving, while the instructor focuses on guiding you through the steps so you can finish with something you can take home.
Your Neon Setup: Glow Paint, Low Light, and Big Feel-Good Results

Painting in the dark changes what you pay attention to. Instead of fussing over fine details in bright overhead light, you’re focused on shapes, color placement, and the fun “reveal” feeling as you go. Neon glow in the dark paint makes the process look more dramatic than a normal classroom session.
And that visual payoff is a big reason this works for mixed groups. Even if one person is careful and another person is chaotic (no judgment), the final look still tends to feel bold and “done.” It’s also why this is a great option when you want something creative but not stressful.
Drinks on the House: How Bottomless Works for the Night

This is a drinks-included event. All drinks are on the house, and that includes alcoholic and non-alcoholic options. If wine is your thing, you’ll likely appreciate the “top up as often as you want” style setup. It’s the kind of structure that makes it easy to relax and enjoy the evening without constantly re-checking your budget.
Just keep one practical note: the session is 2 hours, and the pacing is built around painting. So if you’re planning to have several glasses, slow down enough to stay steady with the brush. Neon paint gets everywhere fast, and you’ll enjoy it more if you stay in control of your hands.
Also, the event includes drinks but not food. If you’re the kind of person who gets snacky while drinking, you’ll want to eat beforehand.
A Realistic Look at the 2-Hour Flow

No one is handing you a clipboard with an exact timetable. But you can expect a straightforward, high-energy arc designed for groups.
You start at the meeting point, which can vary depending on the option you booked. From there, you’ll settle in with your instructor and host, get set up with your canvas and materials, and get into the rhythm of painting. Because the paint glows in low light, the room experience is part of the entertainment, not just a backdrop.
During the session, you’ll be guided through your neon artwork step-by-step, and the vibe includes singing and dancing along to noughties music. That’s a specific detail that matters, because it signals the tone: this isn’t quiet and museum-like. It’s a playful night out that happens to involve art.
By the end, you’ll finish your canvas and take it home, which is the part that turns this from a “fun class” into an actual souvenir. When the goal is a tangible result, you’re more likely to stay engaged all the way through.
Price and Value: Is $47.99 Actually Fair?

At about $47.99 per person, this isn’t trying to be a bargain basement activity. But if you break down what’s included, it starts to look like solid value for London.
Here’s what you’re getting inside that price:
- All painting materials (canvas, brushes, easel, etc.)
- Neon glow in the dark paint
- An apron
- Instructor + host
- Drinks on the house, including alcoholic and non-alcoholic
- The actual event experience, about 2 hours long
A normal night out can add up quickly in London once you factor in a drink or two and a paid activity. This is one of those setups where you’re paying for the whole package. You’re not separately buying supplies or paying extra for the instructor time, and you’re not budgeting for drink costs during the session.
The trade-off is also clear: no food is included. If you normally like to eat during a night out, plan to cover that on your own. But even with that added cost, the “supplies + instruction + unlimited-style drinks” combination can still feel like a fair deal for the kind of evening it is.
Who This Suits Best (And Who Might Skip It)
This works best for people who want an easy win on fun and creativity.
You’ll likely love it if you:
- want a beginner-friendly activity that doesn’t require confidence
- are going with friends, family, or you want a social night even solo
- want something different from the usual tourist circuit
- enjoy drinking while doing a hands-on creative task
- like events that feel like a party but still end with a take-home item
It might be less ideal if you:
- hate messy hands or dark-room environments
- want a quiet, traditional art lesson
- are very hungry and don’t plan to eat beforehand
Tips to Get the Best Night Out of It

If you want your experience to go smoothly, a few practical choices help.
First: dress for paint. Even with an apron, you’ll be happier in clothes you won’t mind getting stained. Second: eat beforehand. Since there’s no food option, it’s smart to handle dinner or a substantial snack before you arrive.
Third: treat the instruction like a game plan, not like art critique. The goal is to finish your canvas with guidance, not to create a “perfect” piece. When you let the neon effect do its job, you’ll spend more time having fun.
Finally: bring the right energy. This event is built around music, laughter, and a good vibe, not silence. If you show up ready to be social, you’ll get the best return on your time.
The Social Side: Great for Groups, Great for Solo People

One of the strongest parts of this experience is that it scales well. For groups, it’s a structured way to hang out without awkward conversation gaps. Everyone gets the same setup, the same instructor guidance, and a shared soundtrack feel that makes the night easier.
For solo visitors, it also works because you’re not “performing” to anyone. You’re in a room with people doing the same activity, and the instructor and host keep the momentum going. That takes the pressure off.
It’s especially popular for planning a memorable night out with a theme. The vibe fits celebratory groups because you leave with something to show for it, plus a story you’ll remember.
Should You Book London Bottomless Sip & Paint in the Dark?
If you want a playful, beginner-friendly activity with neon glow paint and drinks included, this is a strong yes. The price feels more justified when you consider that you’re paying for materials, instruction, and unlimited-style beverages in a single package, and the session ends with take-home art.
Book it if:
- you’re traveling with friends, family, or planning a themed group night
- you want something creative that still feels like entertainment
- you’re okay eating beforehand since there’s no food included
Skip it if:
- you’re expecting a quiet art workshop
- you want food included during the event
- you prefer traditional museum-style outings over hands-on activities
Overall, this is one of those London nights that gives you an experience you can’t really replicate on your own: neon in the dark, guided painting, and a lively soundtrack, all wrapped into a simple two-hour plan.





















