
RAW Rolling Tray Girl
Rolling trays
by RAW
RAW Rolling Tray Girl — Keep Your Roll Tidy
The RAW Rolling Tray Girl is a large metal rolling tray (34 x 27.5 cm) with an enamel-like coating that keeps your herb, papers, and accessories in one place while you roll. RAW is the brand that made unbleached papers a standard — their trays follow the same philosophy: functional, no-nonsense, and built to last longer than your lighter collection.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | RAW |
| Dimensions | 34 x 27.5 cm |
| Material | Metal with enamel-like coating |
| Size category | Large |
| SKU | HS0281 |
| Design | RAW Girl artwork |
| Rolling tray size | Dimensions (approx.) | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Mini | 18 x 12 cm | Solo sessions, travel, festivals |
| Small | 27.5 x 17.5 cm | Solo home use with minimal gear |
| Large (this tray) | 34 x 27.5 cm | Full setup: grinder, papers, tips, lighter, workspace |
Complete your setup: pair this RAW rolling tray with a RAW grinder and some RAW Classic King Size Slim papers. The tray holds everything while you work, and having matching gear just feels right. A rolling tray without a decent grinder next to it is like a kitchen without a chopping board. Order the tray and a pack of RAW pre-rolled tips together and you're sorted from day one.
Why a Rolling Tray Matters More Than You Think
A rolling tray is a flat, lipped surface designed to contain loose herb and accessories while you roll, preventing material loss and keeping your workspace clean. Rolling without one is one of those things that seems fine until you look at your lap, your table, and the carpet. Crumbled herb goes everywhere. Filters roll off the edge. Your grinder sits on a surface that's already covered in sticky residue, and by the end of the session you've lost a solid pinch of material to the floor. It's not dramatic — it's just wasteful and annoying.
The RAW Rolling Tray Girl addresses this with curved raised edges that act as a catch-all. At 34 x 27.5 cm, it's properly large — big enough to hold your grinder, papers, filter tips, lighter, and still have a clear workspace in the centre for the actual roll. We've seen customers try to use book covers, plates, even laptop lids. They all work in a pinch, but none of them have that lip around the edge, and none of them are designed to sit flat with the right amount of surface friction to keep things from sliding.
The honest limitation? It's a large tray. If you're after something pocket-sized for festivals or travel, this isn't it — look at the RAW mini tray instead. But for home sessions, a desk, or a coffee table, the large size is what we'd pick every time. You'll use the space.
What the Enamel-Like Coating Actually Does
The enamel-like coating on this RAW rolling tray is a smooth, slightly glossy layer applied over the metal that serves two practical purposes: easy cleanup and surface protection against scratches. A quick wipe with a damp cloth and any residue comes straight off. No scrubbing, no staining. The coating also shields the metal underneath from wear. We've had the same RAW tray behind our counter for years and the print still looks sharp.
Pick the tray up and you'll notice it has a satisfying weight to it — not flimsy like some of the cheap aluminium trays that bend if you press too hard. The metal is rigid enough that you can roll on your lap without the tray flexing. The artwork itself is a classic RAW design featuring the RAW Girl, printed under the coating so it doesn't peel or fade with use. Compared to trays from brands like Black Leaf or V Syndicate, the RAW sits in a sweet spot between price and build quality — thicker metal, better coating adhesion, and a print that doesn't bubble after a few months. It's the kind of thing that looks better with age, honestly.
How to Use Your RAW Rolling Tray
Using a rolling tray is straightforward: place it on a flat surface, arrange your gear, and roll over the tray so the curved edges catch any spillage.
- Place the tray on a flat surface — table, desk, or your lap if you're on the sofa. The curved edges should face up.
- Set your grinder, papers, filter tips, and lighter on the tray. Having everything within arm's reach before you start makes the whole process smoother.
- Grind your herb directly over the tray so any spillage lands on the metal surface, not the floor. A small RAW cone holds roughly 0.5 g, so grind accordingly.
- Roll as you normally would. Use the flat centre of the tray as your workspace — the edges catch any loose material that falls.
- After your session, tip any leftover herb back into your stash jar. Wipe the tray with a damp cloth or dry tissue to remove residue.
- For a deeper clean, use a small amount of isopropyl alcohol on a cloth — the enamel-like coating handles it without damage.
RAW Rolling Tray Girl vs. Other Large Trays
The RAW Rolling Tray Girl outperforms most large trays in its price range on coating durability and edge height, though it doesn't offer magnetic lids or compartments that some premium trays include.
| Feature | RAW Rolling Tray Girl | Typical budget tray | Premium compartment tray |
|---|---|---|---|
| Material | Rigid metal, enamel-like coating | Thin aluminium or tin | Metal or wood with dividers |
| Edge design | Curved raised edges | Flat or shallow lip | Raised with compartments |
| Print durability | Under-coating, no peeling | Surface sticker, peels over time | Varies |
| Cleanup | Damp cloth wipe | Damp cloth, staining possible | Harder — crumbs in compartments |
| Portability | Home use — too large for pockets | Varies | Home use only |
The honest trade-off: if you want built-in compartments or a magnetic lid, RAW doesn't offer that in this model. But compartment trays tend to trap residue in corners and are harder to wipe clean. For a single open workspace, the RAW design is more practical day to day.









