
Rolling papers
by RAW
RAW Ethereal Rolling Papers King Size Slim are ultra-thin organic hemp rolling papers designed to let the flavour of your dry herb do the talking. At 110mm x 44mm, they sit in the standard king size slim format — the same dimensions you're used to — but the paper itself is noticeably thinner than a standard RAW Classic or even a RAW Black. Hold one up to the light and you can practically see through it. That near-transparency isn't a gimmick; less paper mass means less combustion material between you and the terpene profile of whatever you've rolled up.
We've been stocking RAW papers since well before they became the default choice in every coffeeshop window, and the Ethereal line genuinely surprised us. The burn is slow, even, and the ash holds together in a neat column rather than flaking everywhere. If you've spent months dialling in your grow or you've just picked up something special, these are the papers that won't muddy the taste.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | RAW |
| Product Line | Ethereal |
| Size | King Size Slim |
| Length | 110 mm |
| Width | 44 mm |
| Material | Organic hemp |
| Sheets Per Pack | 32 |
| Bleaching | Unbleached |
| Additives | None — no chalk, no dyes, no burn accelerants |
| SKU | HS2046 |
Complete your setup: RAW Ethereal papers pair naturally with RAW pre-rolled tips for a consistent draw and no soggy ends. If you're rolling on the go, a pocket-sized RAW rolling tray keeps everything together without herb spilling into the lining of your jacket.
Here's the thing most people don't think about: every rolling paper is combustion material. The thicker the paper, the more plant cellulose you're burning alongside your herb, and the more that papery, ashy taste creeps into each drag. With standard papers — even decent ones — you're tasting a blend of your herb and the paper itself. The Ethereal line tackles this head-on by stripping the paper mass down to almost nothing.
Pick up a single Ethereal sheet and you'll notice the difference immediately. It feels fragile — almost like rice paper — but it holds together once you've rolled. The organic hemp fibres give it just enough structural integrity to survive a tuck and roll without tearing, provided you're not ham-fisting it. That's the honest limitation: if you're a rough roller or you tend to overstuff, these papers will punish you. They're not forgiving. You need a light touch and a reasonably even distribution of herb. If your rolling technique is still a work in progress, RAW Classic King Size Slims are thicker, more forgiving, and still a solid choice — then graduate to Ethereals once your fingers know what they're doing.
For anyone who already rolls confidently, though, the payoff is real. The cherry burns at a lower temperature because there's so little paper fuel, which means a cooler, smoother draw. You taste more of the herb's terpene profile — the citrus notes, the pine, the pepper, whatever your particular cultivar brings — and less of that flat, papery background noise. We've had customers come back specifically to say they noticed flavours in their herb they'd never picked up before. That's not marketing fluff; it's just physics. Less paper, less interference.
Both sit in RAW's "thin" category, but they're not the same paper. RAW Black King Size Slim papers are thinner than the Classic line and use an unbleached, pressed hemp fibre. The Ethereal takes that concept further — it's RAW's thinnest paper to date. Side by side, you can see the difference: the Ethereal is noticeably more translucent.
| Feature | RAW Ethereal KSS | RAW Black KSS |
|---|---|---|
| Thickness | Ultra-thin (RAW's thinnest) | Thin (thinner than Classic) |
| Material | Organic hemp | Unbleached hemp |
| Sheets per pack | 32 | 32 |
| Size | 110mm x 44mm | 110mm x 44mm |
| Burn speed | Very slow, pinpoint cherry | Slow, even burn |
| Flavour interference | Minimal — near-zero papery taste | Low — slight paper presence |
| Rolling difficulty | Requires a light touch | More forgiving for average rollers |
If you want the absolute cleanest taste and you're confident in your rolling, go Ethereal. If you want something thin but a bit more robust for everyday use, the Black is the safer bet. We'd pick the Ethereal for weekend sessions when you've got something worth savouring, and the Black for daily use when speed matters more than ceremony.
We roll-tested these against three other thin papers in the shop, and the Ethereal stood out in two ways. First, the cherry — the glowing tip — stays small and tight. Because there's so little paper mass, the combustion point is concentrated rather than spread across a wide front. That means a cooler draw and less wasted herb between puffs. Second, the ash. It holds together in a solid column rather than crumbling. You can go a surprising distance before you need to tap.
The one thing to watch: airflow sensitivity. A thin cherry reacts more to how you draw. Pull too hard and you'll run the burn unevenly. Pull gently, let the herb do its thing, and you get a remarkably smooth, flavour-forward smoke. These papers reward patience.
Yes, noticeably. The ultra-thin organic hemp tears more easily if you apply uneven pressure or overstuff. If you can roll a decent cone with RAW Blacks, you'll manage Ethereals — just go lighter on the tuck. Complete beginners should practise on Classics first.
No. They're unbleached organic hemp with a natural gum line. No chalk, no dyes, no burn accelerants. What you see is what you smoke.
Each pack contains 32 sheets, all measuring 110mm x 44mm. That's the standard king size slim format, so they fit any KSS rolling box or case you already own.
They do. Less paper mass means less fuel for the burn, so the cherry moves slowly and stays small. The trade-off is that uneven packing shows up faster — lumps in your roll will cause the thin paper to canoe if you're not careful.
Most people can, especially with flavourful herb. The near-zero paper mass means terpene notes — citrus, pine, earth — come through more clearly. The flat, ashy background taste you get from thicker papers is almost completely gone.
Last updated: April 2026