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Faceted Rondelle Beads

Faceted rondelles take the beautiful shapes of these beads and bring sparkle and shine with the added facets. With everything from amethyst to turquoise, we are sure to have the bead you are looking for.

Morganite 2x3mm Rondelle Faceted A Grade Banded - 15-16 Inch

Original price $21.00 - Original price $21.00
Original price $21.00
$21.00 - $21.00
Current price $21.00
Login for wholesale

Morganite gets its pink hue from the presence of manganese or cesium in the stone. It's actually a pink variety of Beryl -- the family of gemstones...

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Original price $21.00 - Original price $21.00
Original price $21.00
$21.00 - $21.00
Current price $21.00
Login for wholesale

About this cut

Faceted Rondelle bead shape diagram
Cut name
Faceted Rondelle
Drill style
Center-drilled (face to face — disc axis)
Typical sizes
4mm8mm3mm6mm2mm2x4mm3x6mm2x3mm
Stones in this cut
MoonstoneCubic ZirconiaTurquoiseTourmalineRubyLabradoriteQuartzAquamarineAmethystOpalGarnetAmazonite
Common uses
spacer beads between focal stonesall-rondelle bracelets and necklacesstretch bracelet accentsbeaded chain and wrap necklacesearring drops and danglesalternating with smooth rounds or metal
Related cuts
Rondelle, Microfaceted Rondelle, Tri Cut Rondelle
Design notes
Faceted rondelles run flatter than faceted rounds at the same nominal size, so a 6mm faceted rondelle reads smaller in a strand than 6mm rounds — plan strand counts and clasp proportions accordingly. The flat profile is the main reason designers reach for this cut: it spaces cleanly between focals without crowding, and a full strand drapes closer to the neck or wrist than rounds do. Pair with smooth rounds or coins for contrast between matte volume and faceted sparkle; pair with microfaceted rondelles when you want shimmer density to step up at a focal point. For two-number sizing (e.g., 3x6mm), the first number is bead height and the second is width across — useful when designing to a specific length.

Frequently asked questions

  • What is a faceted rondelle bead?
    A rondelle is a flattened disc-shaped bead — wider across than it is tall — drilled through the center of the disc so it sits like a wheel on the wire. A faceted rondelle adds cut planes around the outer edge, typically two rows of facets meeting at the widest circumference. The result is a low-profile bead that catches light around its perimeter while still stacking tight against neighboring beads. Faceted rondelles are commonly described by two numbers — width across by height (e.g., 3x6mm means 3mm tall, 6mm across) — though single-size labels like 4mm usually refer to the width.
  • What sizes of faceted rondelle does Dakota stock?
    Dakota currently stocks faceted rondelles from 2mm up through 8mm, with the heaviest depth at 4mm (47 strands), 8mm (46), 3mm (43), and 6mm (41). Smaller 2mm options sit at 21 strands. Two-number sizing covers 2x4mm (12), 3x6mm (9), and 2x3mm (6) — where the smaller number is bead height and the larger is width across. Exact bead count per strand varies by size and stone — check the listing for strand length and approximate piece count before ordering.
  • What stones come in faceted rondelle?
    The 276 active faceted rondelle SKUs cover a broad spread of materials. Heaviest depth is in moonstone (18), turquoise (17), and cubic zirconia (17), followed by tourmaline (13), labradorite (12), and ruby (12). Quartz (11), aquamarine (10), opal (9), and amethyst (9) round out the top stones. Beyond the top ten, the cut runs across agates, jaspers, garnets, and other silica and silicate stones. Treatment varies by stone — dye, heat, stabilization, and irradiation are common in this cut depending on the material — and should be disclosed; ask before buying if it isn't specified.
  • What is a faceted rondelle best used for?
    Faceted rondelles are workhorses for spacing and texture. The flat profile lets them sit flush between focal beads, larger rounds, or pendants without throwing off the strand's drape. Smaller sizes (2mm–3mm) work as accent spacers in stretch bracelets, beaded chains, and bezel-set drop earrings. Mid sizes (4mm–6mm) carry whole bracelets and necklaces on their own — the faceting gives a continuous shimmer without the bulk of a faceted round. The 8mm size reads as a statement bead in chunkier strands or alternating with smooth rounds and metal.
  • How does faceted rondelle differ from microfaceted or smooth rondelle?
    Smooth rondelles have no facets — they're polished disc beads that read soft and matte-luminous depending on the stone. Faceted rondelles, the cut described here, have visible cut planes around the edge — usually large enough to count individually with the eye, and typically what designers mean by 'faceted rondelle.' Microfaceted rondelles push the facet count much higher, producing many tiny planes that read as continuous sparkle rather than discrete facets, often in 2mm–3mm sizes. Choose faceted for visible structure and light play, microfaceted for shimmer density, smooth for color and form without surface flash.