Vibes Rice Cones Box – King Size

The VIBES Rice Cones Box in King Size delivers 90 pre-rolled rice paper cones for smokers who want clean flavor and slow burns without the hassle of hand-rolling. Each cone holds about a gram of ground flower and comes pre-tipped, so you're just grinding, packing, and sparking. At 30 coffins with 3 cones each, this box keeps you stocked for months of solo sessions or handles a full summer of group hangs without running dry.

Why rice paper matters

  • Slower burn, longer sesh — Rice paper is thinner than hemp and burns at a mellower pace, so your cone sticks around instead of racing to the filter.
  • Flavor stays on the flower — Less paper taste means your terps actually come through. If you're smoking something worth tasting, these let it happen.
  • Skip the rolling struggle — Pre-formed cones with tips already in place. No tucking, no licking crooked seams, no crumpled attempts in the trash.
  • Bulk that makes sense — 90 cones across 30 pocket-friendly coffins. Grab one coffin for the day, leave the rest at home.
  • Consistent from first to last — Same shape, same capacity, same burn every time. No guessing which cone is going to canoe on you.
  • Room for a real pack — King size means roughly a gram fits without cramming. Enough for a proper session, not a two-hit appetizer.

Made for

These are built for the smoker who actually sits down with a joint. If your move is packing one, posting up somewhere comfortable, and letting it ride for 15-20 minutes while you talk or zone out, VIBES rice cones fit that rhythm. They're also the answer for anyone who respects good flower but never got the hang of rolling by hand — you get the classic cone experience without the learning curve or the wasted papers from failed attempts.

Group session people will appreciate the quantity. Ninety cones handles a lot of hangouts before you're thinking about reordering. And because they come in individual 3-packs, you can toss a coffin in your pocket without hauling the whole box around.

How to use them

The hard part is already done. Each cone arrives shaped, sealed along the seam, and fitted with a tip at the base. Your job is grinding and packing.

Start with a medium-fine grind — consistent enough to pack evenly, not so powdery it clogs airflow. Hold the cone tip-down, add your ground flower in small batches, and tap or gently pack between additions. You're aiming for firm but not brick-dense. Leave a little space at the top to twist closed, or fold the excess paper down if you're lighting up right away.

Because rice paper is thinner than most alternatives, it rewards a careful pack. Stems or chunky pieces can poke through or cause uneven burns, so take an extra second to check your grind. A clean grinder helps here — sticky buildup leads to inconsistent output.

If you're batch-prepping for a party or a weekend away, knock out several cones at once and store them upright in their coffins or a small container until needed. They hold their shape well as long as nothing's crushing them.

Specifications

Brand VIBES
Paper material Rice
Cone size King Size
Capacity per cone Approximately 1 gram
Cones per coffin 3
Coffins per box 30
Total cones 90
Tips included Yes, pre-rolled

Storage tips

Rice paper doesn't like humidity or temperature swings. Keep the box somewhere cool and dry — a drawer, a cabinet shelf, anywhere away from windows and moisture. The coffin design protects individual cones pretty well, so leave them sealed until you need them.

For pre-packed cones you're saving for later, stand them upright in a joint tube or small jar so they don't get bent or crushed. Avoid leaving packed cones loose in a bag where they can roll around and potentially tear.

Rice vs. hemp vs. standard papers

Rice paper sits on the thinner, slower-burning end of the spectrum. Hemp papers burn a bit faster and have a slightly more noticeable taste — some people prefer that earthier character, others find it competes with their flower. Standard wood pulp papers are thicker, burn quickest, and have the most paper flavor of the three.

If clean taste and extended burn time are priorities, rice is the move. If you want something sturdier that's more forgiving when you're learning to roll, hemp might be easier to work with. VIBES makes both, so it's really about what fits your smoking style. For a full look at what's available, the rolling papers collection has options across materials and sizes.

FAQ

  • How much flower fits in each king size cone?
    About a gram when packed properly. You can go lighter for quicker solo sessions or pack closer to full capacity for group passes. Much over a gram and you're compressing things too tight for good airflow.
  • Do these burn slower than hemp cones?
    Generally, yes. Rice paper is thinner and burns at a more gradual pace. The difference is noticeable — expect your cone to last noticeably longer than a comparable hemp paper cone packed the same way.
  • Are filters already included?
    Each cone comes with a tip pre-rolled into the base. No need to add crutches or filters. Just fill and go.
  • How do I keep them from getting crushed?
    Leave unused cones in their coffins inside the box. Each coffin holds three cones snugly. If you're carrying some with you, bring the whole coffin rather than loose cones — they're designed to protect the paper during transport.
  • Is rice paper harder to work with than thicker papers?
    Since these come pre-rolled, you're not doing the tricky folding and sealing work yourself. Just pack them carefully and avoid jamming a tool through the paper. They're more delicate than thick wood pulp papers but hold up fine with normal handling.
  • My flower is really sticky — will that cause problems?
    Sticky flower can clump during grinding, which leads to uneven packing and potential burn issues. Make sure your grind is consistent and your grinder and tools are clean. If material is sticking to everything, let it dry slightly or work in smaller batches.
  • How do I prevent canoeing?
    Pack evenly from bottom to top. Tap the cone gently between additions to settle the material without over-compressing. Remove any stems or large chunks before they go in — these create hot spots that burn faster than the surrounding flower, causing one side to race ahead.
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