
Rolling papers
by Elements
Elements King Size Slim Pink Rolling Papers are rice-based rolling papers that bring a flash of colour to your session without compromising on burn quality. Measuring 110 × 44mm — the standard king size slim format — each sheet is made from natural rice with zero chemical dyes or additives. The pink colour comes through cleanly, and you get 32 leaves per booklet. If you've been rolling with the classic Elements line for years, these are the same thin, slow-burning papers you already trust, just dressed up a bit.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | Elements |
| Paper Type | Rice |
| Size | King Size Slim (110 × 44mm) |
| Papers Per Pack | 32 |
| Colour | Pink |
| Chemical Additives | None |
| SKU | HS1564 |
Pair these with Elements Pink King Size Slim Tips for a matching setup, or grab an Elements Rolling Tray to keep your station tidy. A decent grinder — something like the SLX or a classic metal four-piece — makes a real difference to how evenly these thin papers burn.
Honestly? They roll and smoke exactly the same as the original Elements King Size Slim papers. The difference is purely aesthetic — and that's the whole point. If you're rolling at a party, a picnic, or just on your sofa and fancy something that looks a bit more fun than plain translucent white, the pink stands out. We've had customers buy stacks of these for hen dos, birthdays, and festival kits. They make a surprisingly good small gift, too — the kind of thing that costs almost nothing but shows you actually thought about it.
The thing to know about Elements papers in general: they're rice-based, not wood pulp. That means they're thinner and less papery than your average Rizla. They burn slower and produce less ash. The trade-off? They're slightly trickier to roll if you've got sweaty hands or you're used to thicker papers. Rice papers don't grip as readily as hemp or flax, so if you're brand new to rolling, you might fumble the first couple. Stick with it — once you get the tuck right, they're brilliant.
One honest note: the pink colour doesn't affect taste or burn. We've had people ask if it adds a flavour — it doesn't. These are unflavoured papers. The colouring is cosmetic only, with no chemical additives involved in the process. What you taste is your herb and nothing else.
We've sold thousands of packs of Elements papers over the years. The pink ones started as a novelty — people grabbed them out of curiosity — but they've become a genuine repeat purchase for a lot of customers. The paper itself feels identical to the standard Elements King Size Slim: feather-light, almost translucent when you hold it up to the light, with that distinctive crispness that rice papers have. There's no waxy coating, no slippery feel. Just clean, dry paper that takes a crease well.
The burn line on these is reliably even, which matters more than most people realise. A paper that burns unevenly — canoeing, as it's called — wastes herb and forces you to constantly relight. Elements rice papers have a run line built into the design (a thin strip that helps regulate burn speed), and the pink version has this too. You'll notice the ash is light grey, almost white, which is typical of rice papers with minimal processing. Compared to a bleached wood-pulp paper, the difference in residue is visible.
If you're comparing these to RAW King Size Slim, the main difference is material: RAW uses unrefined hemp and flax, which gives a slightly thicker, more textured paper with more grip. Elements rice papers are thinner and smoother. Both are good — it comes down to whether you prefer a paper that practically disappears (Elements) or one with a bit more body to work with (RAW). For experienced rollers, Elements wins on thinness. For beginners, RAW might be more forgiving.
No. Elements states these papers contain no chemical additives. The pink colouring is achieved without chemical dyes, and the base material remains the same natural rice used in their standard line.
They taste identical. The pink colour is cosmetic only — no flavouring is added. You'll get the same clean, neutral burn as the classic Elements King Size Slim.
Each sheet measures 110 × 44mm, which is the standard king size slim dimension. You get 32 papers per pack — enough for a couple of weeks of regular use.
Slightly. Rice papers are thinner and smoother, so they offer less grip during the tuck. If your fingers are damp or you're still learning, you might find hemp papers like RAW easier to handle. With a bit of practice, rice papers roll beautifully.
A comfortable fill is around 0.75–1.0g of ground herb. You can go lighter for a thinner roll or pack up to about 1.2g if you prefer a fuller cone, though airflow gets tighter past that point.
Elements papers include a run line designed to regulate burn speed. When rolled evenly with a consistent grind, they burn straight. Uneven grinding or loose spots in the roll are the usual culprits behind canoeing, not the paper itself.
Yes. King size slim papers at 110 × 44mm fit standard 110mm rolling machines. The thinness of rice paper works well in machines — just make sure the gum strip faces the right direction before you start.
Last updated: April 2026