The light green camouflage rolling tray is a lipped metal accessory that keeps your grind, papers and filters in one tidy spot. The It's Lit! Light Green Camouflage Rolling Tray from Hemper comes in camo print in soft light green — looks the business on a coffee table, does the job on your lap.
Why the Hemper It's Lit! Camo Tray earns its spot
A lipped metal tray stops roughly 90% of stray grind from hitting your floor or cushions. Roll on the sofa without a tray and you'll find grind in the cushions for weeks. The It's Lit! Light Green Camouflage Rolling Tray addresses that with raised lipped edges that corral loose herb, filter tips and stray papers instead of letting them migrate. The light green camo pattern is the draw here — it's not the usual black or wood-print tray everyone's seen. Pairs well with any setup, whether you're rolling a quick one or grinding down enough for the whole session.
We've seen people try to roll on magazines, laptop lids, the kitchen counter — none of them have a lip, and all of them lead to the same result: half your grind on the floor. A proper tray is one of those EUR 5-15 accessories (around 60-70% of rollers own at least one) that pays for itself the first time you don't have to pick weed out of your carpet. If you want to buy a tray that earns its keep for years, this is a solid pick.
From our counter: One of our regulars in Amsterdam swapped his old wood tray for this camo one after three years of daily use. He told us he'd tried four different trays before settling on a lipped metal one — said the light green camo was the first print he didn't get bored of within a month. Small detail, but he now orders the Medium as gifts for mates too.
Which size should you pick?
| Size | SKU | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Small | HS2656 | Solo rollers, travel, stashing in a drawer. Handles one joint's worth of prep comfortably. |
| Medium | HS2658 | The sensible middle ground. Room for grinder, papers, tips and a bit of herb without eating your whole table. |
| Large | HS2659 | Group sessions of 3-5 people, pre-rolling a batch, or if you just like having space. Doubles as a catch-all tray. |
What Hemper brings to the rolling tray market
Hemper is a US smoke accessory brand founded in 2015 that built its name on monthly subscription boxes shipped to over 100,000 subscribers — meaning their trays, grinders and pipes get tested by thousands of users before hitting wider distribution. The It's Lit! series is their print-forward line: bold graphics, light green camo in this case, printed onto a flat metal tray with rolled lipped edges.
Honest limitation: it's a printed metal tray, not a laser-etched or enamelled one. Treat it like any metal tray — don't soak it, don't scrub the print with abrasives, and don't stub out joints on the surface. Wipe it down with a dry or barely-damp cloth and the print stays sharp for 3-5 years of regular use.
How it compares to a plain tray
The It's Lit! tray differs from a plain metal tray in four measurable ways: print design, size range, brand support and aesthetic appeal.
| Feature | It's Lit! Camo Tray | Plain metal tray |
|---|---|---|
| Lipped edges | Yes (around 8-10mm) | Usually yes |
| Print design | Light green camo | None or basic |
| Size options | 3 sizes (Small, Medium, Large) | Varies |
| Hemper brand backing | Yes (since 2015) | No |
Specifications
Here are the full specs for the light green camouflage rolling tray.
| Brand | Hemper (est. 2015) |
| Product | It's Lit! Light Green Camouflage Rolling Tray |
| Material | Metal with printed finish |
| Design | Light green camouflage print |
| Edge style | Raised lipped edges (approx 8-10mm) |
| Sizes | 3 options: Small (HS2656), Medium (HS2658), Large (HS2659) |
How to use your rolling tray
Using a lipped tray takes six steps from setup to storage.
- Place the tray on a flat surface — table, lap, bed, wherever you're comfortable.
- Grind your dried herbs over the tray so stray bits fall onto the surface instead of the floor.
- Lay out your papers and filter tips on the tray within reach.
- Roll as normal — the lipped edges catch anything that tries to escape.
- When you're done, tip any leftover grind back into your jar. Wipe the tray with a dry cloth.
- Store flat in a drawer or lean it against a shelf. Avoid stacking heavy things on top — the print lasts longer that way.
Complete your setup: order the tray alongside a quality metal grinder for an even grind, a pack of hemp or rice rolling papers, and some pre-rolled filter tips. A small glass jar keeps your ground herb fresh between sessions — get all four and you've got a full rolling station for well under EUR 30.
Frequently Asked Questions
What sizes does the It's Lit! Light Green Camouflage Rolling Tray come in?
Three sizes: Small (SKU HS2656), Medium (SKU HS2658) and Large (SKU HS2659). Pick Small for solo use and travel, Medium for everyday rolling, Large for group sessions or batch pre-rolling.
Is the tray made of metal or plastic?
It's a metal tray with a printed camouflage finish. Metal holds up better than plastic over time — no warping, no cracking at the corners after years of use.
How do I clean a printed rolling tray without wrecking the design?
Wipe with a dry cloth or barely-damp microfibre. Skip abrasive scrubbers, harsh solvents and soaking — these strip printed finishes on any tray brand, not just Hemper.
Can I use it for things other than rolling?
Yes. The lipped edges make it useful for holding keys, coins, jewellery, or as a catch-tray under a grinder. Plenty of customers who buy one end up using theirs as a general desk tray.
Does the camo print look the same as the photos?
The light green camo is a soft, muted palette — not neon, not military-dark. It photographs close to how it looks in hand. If you want something louder, Hemper makes bolder print options too.
Where can I get reliable local information on smoking accessories in Amsterdam?
Maps of Amsterdam coffeeshops and accessory shops are a decent starting point for local context. For wider European drug policy background, EMCDDA (the European Monitoring Centre) publishes country reports, and the Beckley Foundation covers research-led perspectives.
Last updated: April 2026




