Free Form Beads
Free form beads include many shapes; marquise, tear drop, tubes, rondelles, and more. They may be drilled for stringing, or undrilled and used as a cabochon. As the name implies, the shapes are organic and natural, making the best use of the original shape.
Products: 59
Labradorite 6x12-10x20mm Free Form Dancing Drops A Grade - 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 detailsLight Amethyst 9x11-13x18mm Free Form Faceted Oval A Grade - 15-16 Inch
Amethyst is a beautiful purple stone, known as a “Gem of Fire” by ancient cultures. It has been greatly sought after throughout history and was at ...
View full detailsGem Silica Small 3pc Slab
Gem Silica is the rarest and highest form of Chrysocolla, crystallized and infused in Quartz. Gem Silica occurs in a vivid blue green color due to ...
View full detailsLavender Amethyst 6x12-10x20mm Free Form Dancing Drops A Grade - 15-16 Inch
Lavender Amethyst is a transparent lavender variety of Amethyst, which forms in geodes and is generally found in clusters of crystal points. The pr...
View full detailsGolden Labradorite 7x9-10x13mm Free Form Rough Pear A Grade - 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 detailsHubei Turquoise 9-10mm Blue with Matrix Free Form Rondelle AA Grade - 15-16 Inch
Hubei Turquoise is sourced from Hubei Province in Northern China, one of the most recognized turquoise-producing regions in the world. This materia...
View full detailsHubei Turquoise 8x10-10x12mm Blue/Green Free Form Rectangle - 15-16 Inch
Hubei Turquoise is sourced from Hubei Province in Northern China, one of the most recognized turquoise-producing regions in the world. This materia...
View full detailsBlue Rose Quartz 9x13mm Faceted Free Form Rectangle - 15-16 Inch
Rose Quartz is a silicon dioxide crystal and one of the most common varieties of the Quartz family. It is a translucent to transparent stone with a...
View full detailsOcean Jasper 15x20-18x25mm Free Form Pear Beads A Grade - 15-16 Inch
Ocean Jasper is a commercial name for Orbicular Jasper, a variety of Jasper containing variably colored spherical patterns. It forms when Quartz an...
View full detailsChalcedony 12x20-13x25mm Free Form Oval Beads - 15-16 Inch
Blue Chalcedony is a naturally occurring soft blue translucent stone. It is a member of the Quartz family, a form of silica with a cryptocrystallin...
View full detailsChalcedony 15x20-28mm Free Form Oval Beads - 15-16 Inch
Blue Chalcedony is a naturally occurring soft blue translucent stone. It is a member of the Quartz family, a form of silica with a cryptocrystallin...
View full detailsAbout this cut
Frequently asked questions
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What is a free form bead?
Free form is a catch-all for beads that aren't cut to a calibrated geometric shape. Each bead is polished into an irregular nugget, slab, pebble, or organic outline that follows the rough rather than a fixed template, so no two pieces in a strand match exactly. Most are center-drilled through the longest axis and tumble-polished smooth, though some strands include faceted free forms or matte finishes. Because the cut chases the material, free form strands often show off banding, inclusions, and color shifts that would be cropped out of a calibrated round or rondelle. -
What sizes does Dakota stock in free form?
Free form is described by a size range rather than a single dimension, since each bead varies. The deepest stock sits around 6x12–10x20mm nuggets (12 strands) and broader 12–18mm pebble cuts (6 strands), with single-dimension callouts at 9mm and 13mm for more uniform free forms (7 strands each). Smaller sliver-style cuts appear at 3–5x14–16mm, and larger statement pieces run up to 14x25mm. Exact bead count per strand varies with size — strand length should be disclosed, and ask before buying if it isn't specified. -
What stones come in free form at Dakota?
Free form skews toward stones with strong patterning that benefits from an irregular cut. Current depth is in jasper (11 strands across several varieties), chrysoprase (8), turquoise (7), agate (6), amazonite (6), quartz (6), amethyst (6), ocean jasper (5), labradorite (4), and tourmaline (4). You'll also find smaller runs in other materials across the 102 active free form SKUs. Variety, origin, and treatment vary by stone — those details should appear on each listing; ask before buying if anything isn't specified. -
What jewelry uses free form beads best?
Free form is the go-to for organic, one-of-a-kind designs where uniformity would feel wrong — knotted necklaces, asymmetric statement strands, beachy or earthy bracelets, and focal-bead pendants. Larger nuggets (12–18mm and 14x25mm) work as solo focals on cord or leather. Mid-range 6x12–10x20mm reads well as a full strand with spacers between beads to let each shape breathe. Smaller 9mm and 13mm free forms mix into multi-strand designs where you want texture without losing rhythm. -
How does free form compare to calibrated nugget or pebble cuts?
Calibrated nuggets are sized to a tolerance — every bead falls within a narrow range so strands stack predictably. Free form drops that constraint: bead-to-bead variation in length, width, and outline is the whole point. That means more visual movement and better yield from patterned rough, but harder math when you're spec'ing a multi-strand piece or matching to findings. If you need repeatability, choose a sized nugget or rondelle; if you want each finished piece to read as unique, free form earns its keep.