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Rolling Rituals

A short field guide to the small ceremonies that make a session feel like one.

Studio Notes · 5 min read · 18 March 2026
Rolling Rituals

It's not about the smoke. It's the table being cleared. The tray coming out. The grinder doing its slow circle. The small choreography of getting set up — that's the actual ritual. Everything that follows is just the part the ritual makes room for.

Rituals are how we mark time when nothing's chasing us. They're how we tell ourselves we've stepped out of the day. Cooking does it. Coffee does it. So does this.

The setup

  • A heavy wooden tray. Weight matters — it stays put when you lean on it.
  • A grinder that does the job in one twist. Two if the herb's fresh.
  • Papers you actually like the feel of. Rizla orange for tradition, raw natural for slow burn.
  • A lighter with weight to it. Plastic Bics will do, but a Zippo or a Clipper adds to the ceremony.
  • A clean surface. Always. The rest follows from there.

"The difference between a habit and a ritual is in the details."

Why the details matter

We make accessories — trays, grinders, lighters, papers — because we got tired of cheap plastic kits ruining a moment that should feel grown. A nice tray costs you once. A bad one annoys you every time you reach for it.

Same logic as the clothing. Spend on the thing you touch every day and the day improves. Pretty simple maths, in the end.

Field notes

Best session of last year was on a flat roof in Camberwell at golden hour, four of us, one tray, a portable speaker on low. Nobody on their phone. Nobody trying to be anywhere else. The setup took longer than it needed to. That was the point.

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