
Rolling papers
by Cones
Cones King Size are pre-rolled paper cones that you fill, pack, and twist shut — no rolling skill required. Each cone measures 109mm overall with a 30mm tip already built in, giving you a consistent king size shape every single time. The pack contains 3 cones, so you're sorted for a session or two without faffing about with papers and filters on the spot.
A pre-rolled cone removes the one variable that ruins most joints: you. No offence — we've been watching people struggle with king size papers since 1999, and the failure modes are always the same. Too loose, too tight, canoe burn down one side, filter pops out mid-session. A cone eliminates all of that because the shape is already locked in before you even open the pack.
The 109mm length puts these firmly in king size territory, which means they hold roughly 1 to 1.5 grams depending on your grind and how firmly you pack. That's enough for a proper session with a mate or a slow solo smoke if you're not in a rush. The 30mm tip gives decent airflow without that soggy-cardboard feeling you get from hand-rolled filters that start falling apart after five minutes.
Honest limitation: these are basic paper cones, not ultra-thins. You'll taste a bit more paper than you would with, say, RAW Classics or Elements rice papers. For the price of a pack of three, though, the convenience trade-off is worth it — especially when you're outdoors, your hands are cold, or you simply cannot be bothered.
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Type | Pre-rolled paper cone |
| Size | King Size |
| Total length | 109mm |
| Tip length | 30mm |
| Quantity per pack | 3 cones |
| SKU | HS0478 |
| Capacity (approx.) | 1–1.5g depending on grind and packing density |
| Rolling required | None — fill, pack, twist |
Complete your setup: a proper grinder makes all the difference when filling cones. Pair these with a metal herb grinder for a consistent medium grind that packs evenly and burns smoothly. If you want to keep your filled cones fresh for later, a doob tube or small stash container stops them getting crushed in your pocket.
We sell a lot of these to two types of people. First: the honest ones who freely admit they can't roll to save their life. No shame in that — rolling a decent king size joint is genuinely a skill, and some people never pick it up. A cone sidesteps the whole issue. Second: people heading to a festival, park, or party who want to pre-fill a few cones at home and just grab-and-go. Filling three cones takes about five minutes at a table versus the fifteen-minute ordeal of rolling three king size joints while sitting on wet grass.
The texture of the paper is standard weight — not see-through thin, not cardboard thick. When you hold one, it feels sturdy enough that you won't accidentally crush it while packing, which is a real problem with ultra-thin cones. The tip is firm and doesn't collapse when you draw on it. Nothing fancy, nothing fragile, just does the job.
| Factor | Pre-Rolled Cone | Hand-Rolled King Size |
|---|---|---|
| Skill needed | None — fill and pack | Moderate to high |
| Time per joint | About 90 seconds | 2–5 minutes (longer if you're learning) |
| Shape consistency | Identical every time | Depends on your technique |
| Paper thickness control | Fixed — what you get in the pack | Your choice of paper brand and weight |
| Cost per joint | Higher (3 per pack) | Lower (32+ papers per booklet) |
| Portability (pre-session) | Fill at home, carry ready-made | Need papers, filter tips, flat surface |
If you smoke daily and cost matters, a booklet of king size papers and a bag of filter tips is cheaper per joint. But if you smoke occasionally, roll badly, or just want zero hassle for a specific occasion, the per-cone premium is trivial. We'd pick cones for outdoor sessions and hand-rolling for home — best of both worlds.
Roughly 1 to 1.5 grams, depending on how finely you grind and how tightly you pack. A medium grind with gentle tamping usually lands around 1.2g — enough for a solid session.
Not really. A pen, chopstick, or thin dowel works fine. Some cone packs include a small packing stick. The goal is to press the herb down evenly without compacting it so tightly that air can't flow through.
That's literally the point. If you can hold a cone upright and pinch herb into the opening, you can fill one. No rolling technique needed — the cone and tip are already formed for you.
Usually means uneven packing. If one side is denser than the other, the looser side burns faster, causing a canoe. Tamp in small layers and rotate the cone a quarter turn between each pinch to distribute evenly.
Keep them in the original packaging, somewhere dry and away from direct sunlight. Paper absorbs moisture fast, and a damp cone burns terribly. A sealed container or zip-lock bag works if you've already opened the pack.
Very similar. RAW King Size cones are 109mm with a 26mm tip; these have a 30mm tip. The overall length is identical, so capacity is comparable — the slightly longer tip here just means marginally less paper in the smoking section.
Yes, and that's one of the best reasons to use them. Fill a few at home, store them upright in a tube or case, and they'll be ready when you are. Just don't leave them loose in a pocket — they'll get crushed.
Last updated: April 2026