Gemstone Bicone Beads
We have been working for over a decade to cut traditional stone bicones. With recent advancements made in small scale lapidary, our factory has figured out how to craft a stone line based on this classic shape. The most amazing thing is that each facet point is cut by hand, which creates organically beautiful 3-4mm bicones available in a variety of popular stone types.
Products: 32
White Howlite 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
White Howlite is named for Canadian mineralogist Henry How, who first discovered the stone in Southern California in 1868. It is typically white or...
View full detailsTiger Eye 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Tiger Eye is a macrocrystalline Quartz stone with bands of rich golds and browns. Its chatoyant layers that create a flash which seems to emanate f...
View full detailsSmoky Quartz 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Smoky Quartz is a translucent smoky brown or gray variety of Quartz. It ranges from almost completely transparent to an almost opaque brownish to g...
View full detailsSunset Dumortierite 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Sunset Dumortierite has a much brighter palette than regular Dumortierite, from light blue to lapis blue to cobalt, as well as some occurrences of ...
View full detailsGolden Gray Moonstone 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Moonstone naturally occurs in a broad spectrum of colors, but is most commonly associated with white, gray and peach. It's soft chatoyancy is remin...
View full detailsBlack Rutilated Quartz 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Rutilated Quartz is a silicon dioxide mineral with unique needle-like inclusions of Rutile. These “needles” usually appear golden, but can also app...
View full detailsAfrican Turquoise 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
African Turquoise is not actually Turquoise, but rather a speckled teal Jasper found in Africa and often treated to simulate the beautiful blue to ...
View full detailsChrysocolla 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Chrysocolla, a hydrous copper silicate, is often mistaken for turquoise due to its rich blues and blue to greens. It often also occurs with colors ...
View full detailsLabradorite 8mm Faceted Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Labradorite is remarkable for the way its aggregate layers refract light, creating iridescent flashes of blue, gold, pale green or copper red. This...
View full detailsGreen Lodalite Quartz 6mm Bicone - 15-16 Inch
Green Lodolite is Quartz with inclusions of sand. These inclusions range broadly in type and color and produce patterns that can look like gardens....
View full detailsAbout this cut
Frequently asked questions
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What is a bicone bead?
A bicone is a faceted bead shaped like two cones joined base-to-base, with the widest point (the equator) in the middle and tapered points at each end. The drill runs straight through the points, so beads sit tip-to-tip on the wire. Most bicones are machine-faceted with a regular pattern of diamond-shaped facets that catch light from the angled walls. The shape is calibrated, so beads in the same size match closely in profile, making them straightforward to use in patterned strands and spacer roles. -
What sizes does Dakota stock in bicones?
Dakota's bicone stock concentrates on 8mm (about 25 active products) and 4mm (about 13 active products), with a small number of 6mm and 3mm options. The 4mm size is the workhorse for spacer roles, accent runs between larger focal beads, and detail in finer-gauge stringing. The 8mm size carries more visual weight and works as the primary bead in a strand or paired with rounds and rondelles of similar diameter. Sizes are nominal — measure if you're matching to a specific finding or pattern. -
What stones come in bicone cut at Dakota?
Current bicone stock spans roughly 40 products across stones including moonstone, garnet, lapis, aquamarine, citrine, rose quartz, clear quartz, prehnite, amethyst, and carnelian. The cut shows up most often in transparent and translucent material — quartz family stones and feldspars — because the angled facets read brighter through light-passing stone. Opaque stones in bicone are less common in the current mix. Treatment varies by stone (heat, dye, irradiation, stabilization are all possible depending on material); treatment should be disclosed — ask before buying if it isn't specified. -
What jewelry uses bicone beads best?
Bicones earn their place as accent and spacer beads in stringing work — the tapered points let them nest against rounds, rondelles, and bead caps without crowding. Designers use 4mm bicones as detail beads between larger focal stones, in earring drops where the faceted profile catches movement, and in delicate bracelets. 8mm bicones can carry a strand on their own or alternate with smooth rounds for textural contrast. They also work well with crystal bicones in mixed-material designs where the geometry matches across stone and glass components. -
Bicone vs faceted round — when to choose which?
A faceted round keeps a roughly spherical silhouette with facets cut into the surface; a bicone is a geometric double-cone where the shape itself is the design. Bicones read more angular and architectural on the wire, with crisp points where each bead meets the next. Faceted rounds blend into a strand more softly and pair more neutrally with smooth beads. Choose bicone when you want defined geometry and sparkle from clear angles; choose faceted round when you want sparkle in a more traditional bead silhouette. Bicones also nest more tightly with bead caps.