Obviously there are more than one type of Cigarellos. The idea of a cigarello is cigar tobacco the size of a cigarette with a filter. Alcapones are the best cigarellos ever and they are the size of cigarettes. I have never seen a cigarello bigger than a cigarette, but there might be some. The cigarellos I have smoked are Alcapones, havana honeys, romeo y julieta, and some other brand I can't remeber the name of. All except the romeo y julieta were flavored, which they ussually are. Most of the time they are flavored with some sort of liquor like brandy or congac.
lol dude go to your CVS and they will probablly have havana honey cigarillos. They are the size of cigarettes and they are flavored (not with liquor in this case). Go to any tobacco shop and they will probablly have Alcapones which are also cigarillos the size of cigarettes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cigarillo They have more tobacco in them because they have no fillers or additives. And they are basically the size of cigarettes. Do not take my word for it, go to the link and look it up. I do not know about this person's accurate measurements, but it shows pictures as well and you can look at them, basically the same size as cigarettes.
I just rolled my first blunt last weekend. I used a purple haze blunt wrap and it worked very well. The hardest part of the whole ordeal was not eating the blunt wrap before i could roll the blunt, because it smelled so good and felt like a fruit roll-up. I usually suck at rolling joints and am pretty inexperienced at rolling, but man that blunt turned out great. I think I'm gonna try another soon so I can rule out beginners luck.
as the resident cigar enthusiast, i'll try to clarify on the cigarillo - a cigarillo is simply a miniature cigar, and most that i've smoked do NOT have a filter. in general, a cigarillo will have a ring gauge of anywhere from 20-36 (for comparison, most corona sized cigars have a ring gauge between 38 and 46, and most robustos, toros, and churchills are 48 to 56, with 50 essentially being standard- i believe phillies blunts are machine made coronas at a 42 ring gauge) a cigarillo is USUALLY 3 to 4 and a half inches in length, but can be longer not all cigarillos are good for rolling, just as not all cigars are. good cigarillos (a relative term for cigar smokers - cigarillos burn really hot and dont offer as much smoke or the same flavor as full sized cigars) will have actual tobacco leaves for wrappers, whereas the cheap machine made ones will have homogenous tobacco, a paperlike product made from scraps of tobacco - like you find on blunts al capones are ok for a cheap smoke, i remember liking them when i smoked cigarettes constantly. these days i prefer onyx reserves cigarillos or acid c-notes when i want a small smoke, though. CAO has some good cigarillos, and montecristo cigarillos are ok, too. overall, i'd prefer a nice robusto or toro sized smoke, though. some cigarillos WILL have filters, but most i've seen do not, just as most cigars are unfiltered. cigars are SUPPOSED to be much more flavorful than cigarettes and are NOT supposed to be inhaled, and a filter is usually counterproductive in that department.
the key to blunt rolling is to not try to roll the whole blunt at once, just get one end stuck down then move along the blunt rolling and tightening while licking and sealing the edge.