
Rolling papers
by Vibes
Vibes Rice King Size Slim rolling papers are ultra-thin rice papers designed to burn slowly and let your herbs do the talking. Each sheet holds up to 1g of dry material — that's proper king size territory — and the rice construction means a noticeably slower, more even burn than standard hemp papers. You get 33 papers per booklet, which is a solid run before you need to restock.
Rice rolling papers burn slower than hemp — that's the short version. The longer version: rice paper is thinner, produces less ash, and contributes almost zero flavour of its own. If you've ever rolled with a thicker paper and tasted more paper than herb, you already know the problem these solve. The Vibes Rice King Size Slim sits at the thinner end of the spectrum, which means you're getting the full terpene profile from whatever you've packed inside.
The trade-off? Thinner papers are less forgiving when you roll. They can crease or tear if you handle them roughly, and they don't stick to sweaty fingers the way a thicker hemp paper might. If you're still developing your rolling technique, you'll want dry hands and a bit of patience. But once you've got the muscle memory, rice papers reward you with a cleaner, smoother session that lasts noticeably longer than the same amount of material in a hemp skin.
We've had customers come back specifically for these after trying them once — the lack of paper taste is that obvious. It's one of those differences you can't un-notice.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | Vibes |
| Material | Rice |
| Size | King Size Slim |
| Capacity | Up to 1g dry herbs per paper |
| Papers Per Booklet | 33 |
| Burn Speed | Slow (slower than hemp) |
| Thickness | Ultra-thin |
| SKU | HS0893 |
Complete your setup with a grinder for an even, consistent pack — uneven material is the number one cause of canoes and uneven burns, regardless of how good your papers are. A rolling tray keeps everything tidy and catches what would otherwise end up on your carpet. If you prefer not to roll by hand, grab a pack of pre-rolled cones in the same king size format.
Standard-size papers hold roughly 0.5g. King size slim papers hold up to 1g. That's double the material in a single roll, which makes these the obvious pick for group sessions or anyone who doesn't want to roll twice in a row. The slim width keeps things manageable — you're not wrestling with a novelty-sized sheet — while the extra length gives you room to work with a proper amount of herb.
The slow burn rate matters more than most people realise. A faster-burning paper means more material combusts between draws, which is just waste. With Vibes Rice papers, the cherry holds steady and the paper catches up to your pace rather than racing ahead of it. Over a 33-paper booklet, that adds up to a meaningful difference in how far your herbs stretch.
One honest limitation: rice papers don't have the natural grip that hemp papers offer. The gum line seals well once you lick it, but the paper itself is slippery. If you normally roll with slightly damp fingers for traction, you'll need to adjust. Dry hands, light touch — that's the technique here.
The 3 main paper materials you'll run into are rice, hemp, and wood pulp (often sold as "unbleached" or "natural"). Here's how they actually compare when you're rolling and smoking, not just reading a spec sheet.
| Feature | Rice (Vibes Rice) | Hemp | Unbleached Wood Pulp |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burn Speed | Slowest | Medium | Fastest |
| Paper Taste | Almost none | Mild, earthy | Noticeable |
| Thickness | Ultra-thin | Thin | Medium |
| Rolling Difficulty | Harder — less grip, tears easily | Moderate — slight texture helps | Easiest — most forgiving |
| Ash | Minimal, white | Light grey | Darker, more volume |
| Best For | Flavour purists, experienced rollers | All-rounders | Beginners, quick rolls |
If you're after the cleanest taste and slowest burn, rice wins. If you want something a bit more forgiving to roll with, hemp is the middle ground. We'd pick rice every time for a session where flavour matters — but we'd grab hemp for rolling on a windy festival field where finesse goes out the window.
Yes, slightly. Rice paper is thinner and more slippery, so it doesn't grip your fingers or the material the same way hemp does. Keep your hands dry and use a light touch. Once you've rolled 5 or 6, the technique clicks.
Each booklet contains 33 king size slim rolling papers. That's standard for most king size booklets across brands.
Barely at all. Rice paper contributes almost zero flavour, which is the main reason people choose it over hemp or wood pulp. You taste your herbs, not the paper. The difference is immediately noticeable if you switch from a thicker paper.
Up to 1g of dry herbs per paper. That's roughly double what a standard single-wide paper holds. You don't have to max it out — 0.5g to 0.75g rolls just fine and gives a slightly tighter, slower-burning result.
Rice paper is thinner and denser than hemp paper, which means less material combusting per second. The result is a slower, more even burn with less ash. You'll notice the cherry moves down the roll at a steadier pace compared to hemp or wood pulp.
You can, but they're not the most forgiving option for your first few rolls. The ultra-thin paper tears more easily under pressure and doesn't offer much grip. Start with hemp papers if you're brand new to rolling, then switch to rice once your technique is solid.
Both are the same length — roughly 110mm. King size slim is narrower, which means less paper around your material and a tighter roll. Less paper equals less paper taste and a slightly slower burn. Slim is the more popular format for a reason.
Last updated: April 2026