
G-Rollz Dyed Rolling Papers + Tips & Tray
Rolling papers
by G-Rollz
G-Rollz Dyed Rolling Papers + Tips and Tray
The G-Rollz Dyed Rolling Papers + Tips and Tray is a complete rolling kit that bundles 50 lightly dyed papers, 50 filter tips, a bamboo poker, and a foldable tray into one compact package. Each paper is made from finely pressed plant fibres with an acacia tree sap gumline — no harsh chemicals, no additives, just a smooth smoke with a splash of colour.
Design Selection
This kit ships in a random design — you get what you get. G-Rollz rotate their artwork regularly, so the colour and print on your papers will be a surprise. If you order multiple packs, there is a decent chance you will receive different designs.
Specifications for G-Rollz Dyed Rolling Papers
Everything you need to know about what is inside the box, laid out plainly.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | G-Rollz |
| Paper Material | Finely pressed plant fibres |
| Gumline | Acacia tree sap (natural) |
| Papers per Pack | 50 |
| Filter Tips per Pack | 50 |
| Accessories | Bamboo poker, foldable rolling tray |
| Design | Random (varies per pack) |
| Chemicals / Additives | None |
| SKU | HS1617 |
Complete your session setup with a decent grinder — the SLX Non-Stick Grinder keeps herb fluffy and feeds papers evenly. If you prefer pre-rolled cones, check out the G-Rollz Pre-Rolled Cones for the same plant-fibre quality without the manual work.
Why This G-Rollz Rolling Kit Belongs on Your Table
Rolling papers on their own are cheap and easy to find. But the actual rolling experience? That is where most kits fall short. You end up tearing a filter tip from a business card, balancing your tray on a book, and poking the end with a pen cap. The G-Rollz Dyed Rolling Papers + Tips and Tray removes all of that faffing about.
The foldable tray gives you a proper flat surface — wide enough to spread your material, catch stray bits, and keep everything in one place. The 50 included filter tips are the right weight and width, so you are not folding cardboard scraps and hoping they hold. And the bamboo poker is genuinely useful for packing the end of a joint without tearing the paper. We have seen people use keys, chopsticks, even earbuds. The poker is better than all of them.
One honest note: the papers are lightly dyed, which looks brilliant, but they are slightly thicker than ultra-thin rice papers. If you are used to the near-transparent feel of an OCB Slim or Elements paper, these will feel different in your fingers — a touch more body, a bit more structure. That is not a flaw; it actually makes them easier to roll with, especially if you are still building your technique. But if paper thinness is your top priority, know what you are getting into.
What the Papers Actually Feel Like
The plant-fibre material has a light texture to it — not glossy, not papery, somewhere between a hemp wrap and a classic wood-pulp rolling paper. There is a slight grain you can feel when you run your thumb across the surface. The acacia tree sap gumline activates with a quick lick and sticks on the first pass, which is more than we can say for some budget papers where you end up licking the strip 3 times and praying.
The dye itself does not affect the taste. We have rolled with these side by side against undyed plant-fibre papers and there is no chemical aftertaste, no odd smell when you light up. G-Rollz specifically formulate these without harsh chemicals or additives, and you can tell — the ash burns clean and grey, not black.
According to research published in the journal Inhalation Toxicology, the elemental composition of rolling papers can vary significantly between brands, with some containing trace heavy metals in the paper or tipping material (PMC11064008). G-Rollz address this by sticking to plant fibres and natural acacia sap — no bleach, no chemical adhesives.
How to Use the G-Rollz Rolling Kit
Straightforward steps, nothing complicated. If you have rolled a joint before, you already know most of this — but the kit makes each step cleaner.
- Unfold the tray and lay it flat on a stable surface. The crease sits in the centre, giving you a slight channel that naturally funnels loose material toward the middle.
- Take one filter tip from the pack and fold it into an M or W shape at one end, then roll the rest of the card around it to form a cylinder. The tips are pre-cut to the right width — no trimming needed.
- Place the filter at one end of a dyed rolling paper, gumline facing you at the top edge.
- Spread your ground material evenly along the paper, using the tray to catch anything that falls. Aim for roughly 0.3–0.5g per paper for a standard joint.
- Tuck the non-gum edge of the paper around the material and roll upward, keeping even pressure with your thumbs and index fingers.
- Lick the acacia sap gumline once — a single pass is enough — and seal the joint from filter to tip.
- Use the bamboo poker to gently pack the open end. Push material down about 3–5mm to create a firm, even burn. Twist the excess paper at the tip to close it off.
- Fold the tray back up for storage. Everything — leftover papers, tips, poker — fits inside the folded tray.










