$ 8.49
The RAW Tips Rawlbook is a 10-page booklet packed with 480 natural, unbleached rolling tips for anyone who rolls their own. Made on an antique fourdrinier paper machine in northern China, these tips give you that clean, unrefined RAW feel without adding taste or chemicals to your smoke. If you're tired of buying tip packs every week or just want a stash that lasts, this little book keeps you sorted for months.
This is your go-to if you roll regularly and want a steady supply of tips without constantly restocking. Perfect for daily rollers, people who bring their kit to sessions, or anyone building out a proper RAW collection. If you're the type who rolls for friends or keeps a communal stash, the Rawlbook means you're not the one always begging for tips.
Each page holds 48 perforated tips. Tear one off along the perforation, roll it into a cylinder or accordion fold (whichever style you prefer), and slide it into the end of your roll before you twist it closed. The natural paper holds its shape without going soggy mid-session, and the unbleached material means you're not adding weird tastes or chemicals to the end of your smoke.
Because these are RAW tips, they're made from the same unrefined paper as their rolling papers, so if you're already using RAW papers, the pairing is seamless. The booklet format keeps tips clean and organized, so you're not digging through loose packs or finding crumpled tips at the bottom of your bag.
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Total Tips | 480 |
| Pages | 10 |
| Tips Per Page | 48 |
| Material | Natural, unbleached paper |
| Manufacturing | Antique fourdrinier paper machine, northern China |
| Format | Perforated booklet |
RAW tips are made using the same philosophy as their papers: natural, unrefined, and free of harsh processing. The antique fourdrinier machine they use creates a thicker, more durable paper that doesn't fall apart when it gets a little wet from saliva or humidity. Unlike cheaper tips that can taste like cardboard or disintegrate halfway through a session, RAW tips hold their shape and stay neutral.
The Rawlbook format is part novelty, part practical storage. It's a nod to RAW's branding (they love the book aesthetic), but it also keeps your tips in one place instead of scattered across multiple packs. If you've ever lost half a pack of tips in your couch cushions, you'll appreciate the bound booklet.
Keep the Rawlbook in a dry spot. Paper tips can absorb moisture if you leave them in a humid environment, which makes them harder to roll and less structurally sound. Store it with your papers or in a mylar bag if you're keeping everything sealed up. Don't let it get crushed or bent in your pocket—once the perforations tear unevenly, they're harder to use cleanly.
480 total. That's 48 tips per page across 10 pages. If you roll one a day, that's over a year's worth of tips in one book.
Yeah, they work fine with king size, 1¼, and regular papers. Roll them tighter or looser depending on your paper size.
They're genuinely unbleached. You can see the natural tan color in the paper, and they don't have that chemical smell you get from bleached tips. RAW's whole brand is built on unrefined materials, so they're consistent about it.
The perforations are solid. As long as you tear along the line and don't yank at an angle, they come off clean. If you're tearing mid-roll with wet fingers, you might get a rough edge, but that's true for any perforated paper.
Depends on how you roll. If you like keeping your kit organized and compact, the booklet is great because it's all in one place and doesn't take up much space. If you prefer loose packs you can distribute to different spots or friends, you might find it less convenient. It's functional and fits the RAW aesthetic, so it's a bit of both.
Price-wise, you're usually getting a better per-tip value with the Rawlbook since you're buying in bulk. The booklet also means you're not throwing away a bunch of little cardboard boxes from individual packs. If you roll regularly, this is the move.
Pre-rolled cones already have tips built in, so you don't need these unless you're rolling from scratch. If you're hand-rolling with papers, that's when you'd use these tips.