Gemstone Donut Pendants
Gemstone Donut Pendants are a great way to make a statment with your necklace designs. Using donut bails is an easy way to make a beautiful pendant that you can easily add to your favorite chain or simply use a larks head knot with your favorite round leather or flat suede. For the more advanced designer, you can bead stick a custom "bail" or put your silver smithing kills to work and creat your own metal bail.
The Dakota Stones Gemstone Donuts are a simple shape with many possibilites!
Products: 39
Rhyolite 40mm Donut Pendant
Rhyolite is a volcanic, igneous rock with high silica content. Its name is taken from the Greek word “rhyax,” meaning “a stream of lava.” It is che...
View full detailsRuby Zoisite 40mm Donut Pendant
Ruby Zoisite occurs naturally when small Ruby crystals become embedded within Zoisite. The Ruby inclusions in this stone are pink to reddish purple...
View full detailsJade 40mm Donut Pendant
Jade refers to an ornamental mineral, mostly known for its green varieties. Jade has been used for tens of thousands of years, initially as tools b...
View full detailsGreen Jasper 40mm Donut Pendant
Since gemstones (natural, enhanced, or man-made) have variations in colors and patterns, the one you receive may look different from what is shown.
Unakite 40mm Donut Pendant
Unakite is a granite composed of pink Feldspar and Epidote, creating a beautiful blend of pink and green in mottled patterns. The colors in this st...
View full detailsGreen Brecciated Jasper 50mm Square Donut - Pendant
This stone is composed of angular fragments of minerals. Pyhsically, it is found in a pale and earthy green. Metaphysically it is often used for st...
View full detailsGreen Brecciated Jasper 40mm Square Donut - Pendant
This stone is composed of angular fragments of minerals. Pyhsically, it is found in a pale and earthy green. Metaphysically it is often used for st...
View full detailsTree Agate 40mm Donut Pendant
Tree Agate is not banded like other Agates, and therefore is not an Agate in the strictest terms. Rather than banding, Tree Agate has dendritic inc...
View full detailsAfrican Green Jasper 40mm Donut Pendant
African Green Jasper is a single-colored opaque stone, ranging in color from a deep olive green to a pale spring green with brown banding or stripe...
View full detailsAbout this cut
Frequently asked questions
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What is a donut bead?
A donut is a flat, disc-shaped stone with a large center hole — essentially a stone ring. Unlike a typical bead drilled through one axis, a donut is meant to hang from cord, leather, or ribbon threaded through the center opening, or to be wrapped with wire and used as a pendant frame. The face is usually polished smooth on both sides so it reads the same from either direction. Donuts function more as findings or focal components than as stringing beads, and they're a long-running staple in leather-cord and macramé jewelry. -
What sizes does Dakota stock donuts in?
Dakota's donut inventory is concentrated at 40mm, which is the standard size for pendant work and the size most cord and bail findings are built around. 40mm gives enough face area to show the stone's pattern clearly while keeping the piece wearable as a single pendant. Sizes can vary slightly stone to stone since donuts are individually cut from larger rough — exact diameter and hole size should be disclosed, and ask before buying if you need tight tolerances for a specific finding. -
What stones come as donuts at Dakota?
Jasper dominates the donut category with around 22 active products, including picture jasper and fancy jasper variants — the patterning in jaspers reads especially well at donut scale. Agate, lapis, rhyolite, tiger eye, onyx, dumortierite, and goldstone are also stocked. Donuts work best in opaque or strongly patterned stones where the broad polished face shows off color zoning, dendrites, or matrix. Treatment varies by stone (dyeing in agate, stabilization in turquoise-family material) — check the listing for specifics. -
How do designers use donut beads?
Donuts are pendant components first. The most common use is a lark's-head knot in leather or waxed cotton cord threaded through the center, which needs no metal findings at all. They also wrap well with wire — coiled bails, woven cages, or simple over-the-top wraps. Some designers use them as connectors in multi-strand pieces or as focal anchors in macramé. Because the donut hangs from its center hole rather than the edge, weight distribution is even and the stone sits flat against the chest. -
How is a donut different from a coin or large-hole bead?
A coin bead is drilled edge-to-edge through the thickness, so it strands like any other bead and the face shows when worn. A donut has a large central hole and no through-drilling — it's not meant to be strung in a row, it's meant to hang. Large-hole beads (sometimes called rondelle slides) sit on the cord rather than around it. If you want a focal stone that hangs from a cord without a metal bail, you want a donut; if you want to string flat discs in a row, you want coins.