Artist pages under one studio
Each artist needs their own work, flash, request preferences, booking status, and shop products while still belonging to the studio brand.
Small tattoo studios
BZZZ is building toward multi-artist tattoo studio software for shops that need artist pages, booking requests, flash sales, shop products, deposits, consent status, and studio-level visibility in one place. Studio is coming soon, and BZZZ is not billing studios yet.

4 artists · Los Angeles · booking by artist




Artists
The studio problem
A small tattoo studio is usually a mix of resident artists, guest artists, private books, shared policies, walk-in questions, deposits, products, consent records, and client follow-up. If the software only adds more tabs, the owner still ends up managing the shop through memory and DMs.
Each artist needs their own work, flash, request preferences, booking status, and shop products while still belonging to the studio brand.
Owners need to see what is coming in across bookings, flash, deposits, shop sales, consent status, and client follow-up without taking over every artist account.
Tattoo appointments are projects, not generic time blocks. A studio flow needs consults, sessions, deposits, artist availability, and client details connected.
Studios should be able to sell merch, prints, gift cards, aftercare, event drops, and artist products from the same place clients already use to book.
Studio owner feedback
This is not a fake notify-me box. Use it to tell us how your studio handles artists, deposits, booking, consent, products, and payouts. Those answers shape what gets built first.
Prefer email? Send shop details to contact@bzzz.ink.
RuneBooking open
MarlowFlash drop
VeraGuest spot
SaintWaitlistToday 3 consults, 2 sessions, 1 pickup order
Needs review 2 deposits, 4 consent records
Shop Hoodies, aftercare, gift cards, flash PDFs
Planned studio view
The studio page should help clients choose the right artist. The owner view should show what needs attention across the shop. The artist view should still protect each artist’s own work, bookings, products, and client flow.
What BZZZ is planning
A public studio page with roster, artist specialties, booking links, flash collections, shop products, and studio contact details.
Invite artists, show who is booking, control which artists appear on the studio page, and keep each artist page connected to the shop.
See artist availability, consults, sessions, deposits, and blocked time in one studio-level view. This is planned, not billed yet.
Track flash, digital products, deposits, tips, merch, gift cards, and shop orders across the studio.
Keep consent status and client details attached to bookings so the front desk and artist know what still needs attention.
Planned studio tools should help owners understand where artists are working, especially for guest spots and shared stations.
Tattoo studio software for small shops
Small tattoo studios do not all run the same way. Some shops take every deposit through the studio. Some let each artist handle money directly. Some have a front desk. Some are appointment-only private studios where every artist manages their own books. That is why BZZZ is not rushing studio billing before the workflow is real.
The direction is clear: a tattoo studio should have one public studio page, connected artist pages, a shared calendar view, flash and digital product sales, physical shop products, deposits, tips, consent records, client details, and practical reporting. But the permission model, payout model, front desk view, and owner dashboard need feedback from real shops before BZZZ locks the product.
If you run a 2-5 artist tattoo shop, BZZZ wants to know what currently breaks: booking requests in Instagram DMs, missed deposits, lost consent forms, product orders with unclear pickup or shipping, guest artist scheduling, or not knowing which flash and shop products are actually making money.
What is live now
If one or two artists in the shop want to try BZZZ now, they can use the current artist flow: booking requests, flash/digital listings, shop products, deposits, tips, portfolio images, and client details. The shared studio account is the piece still being built.

Studio questions
No. Studio is waitlist-only right now. BZZZ is not collecting studio subscription money until the multi-artist workflow is ready enough to use with real shops.
A studio can use individual artist pages today, especially for solo artists inside the shop. The true shared studio account is the coming-soon part.
That is the plan. Each artist should be able to show portfolio work, sell flash, take booking requests, list products, and connect back to the studio.
Studio-level sales visibility is planned. The exact permission model needs feedback from real studio owners before it is locked in.
Print-on-demand is planned for later. The current shop model is artist or studio fulfilled, with pickup or artist shipping.
Studio owners who join early can tell BZZZ what the first studio workflow must include before the product gets locked into the wrong shape.