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Faceted Cube Beads

Incorporating faceted cube beads is a fantastic way to add dimension to even the simplest of designs. There are no limits in the ways you can use them.

Cacoxenite Natural 6-7mm Table Cut Cube Bead - 15-16 Inch

Original price $39.00 - Original price $39.00
Original price $39.00
$39.00 - $39.00
Current price $39.00
Login for wholesale

Cacoxenite is the trade name for this naturally occurring blend of seven stone types. It was originally named for the visible inclusions of the min...

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Original price $39.00 - Original price $39.00
Original price $39.00
$39.00 - $39.00
Current price $39.00
Login for wholesale

About this cut

Faceted Cube bead shape diagram
Cut name
Faceted Cube
Drill style
Center-drilled (corner to corner)
Typical sizes
4mm2mm7mm6mm3mm5mm2.5mm8-9mm
Stones in this cut
TurquoiseTourmalineMoonstoneBerylAquamarineChrysopraseOpalAmethystFluoriteMorganiteIoliteAmazonite
Common uses
geometric strung braceletsstation necklaces with knotted spacingminimalist earring dropsaccent beads between focal stonesmen's bracelet designslayered delicate chains (2mm–3mm)mixed-cut strands with rounds and rondelles
Related cuts
Cube, Table Cut Cube
Design notes
Faceted cubes read more architectural than faceted rounds — the flat faces give broad light flashes rather than continuous sparkle, so they work well when you want geometry to be part of the design language. Because they're drilled corner-to-corner, they sit point-down on the strand and need a hair more bead-to-bead clearance than a round of the same nominal size; account for that when calculating strand length. Pair with smooth rounds or faceted rondelles to soften the geometry, or run all-cube for a clean modernist look. In 2mm–3mm sizes they function as spacers; 4mm and up they're strong enough to carry as the primary bead.

Frequently asked questions

  • What is a faceted cube bead?
    A faceted cube is a six-sided bead cut from a square block, with each face polished flat and edges chamfered or beveled to add additional small facets at the corners. Dakota's faceted cubes are typically drilled corner-to-corner (diagonal) rather than face-to-face, so the bead sits on a point and shows two faces forward on the strand. The flat faces catch light in broad flashes rather than the sparkle pattern of a faceted round, giving a more architectural, geometric read on the strand.
  • What sizes does Dakota stock in faceted cube?
    Current stock runs from 2mm up to roughly 8–9mm, with 4mm the deepest size by product count (39 SKUs), followed by 2mm (26), 7mm (18), 6mm (13), 3mm (13), and 5mm (9). A small number of 2.5mm and 8–9mm options round out the range. The 2mm–3mm sizes are typical for delicate spacer work and layered chains; 4mm–7mm sit comfortably as the primary bead in bracelets and necklaces. Sizes are nominal — measure for tight-tolerance work and check the listing for exact dimensions.
  • What stones come in faceted cube?
    Dakota carries 155 active faceted cube SKUs across a wide stone range. Top counts include Turquoise (16), Tourmaline (10), Moonstone (9), Beryl (8), Chrysoprase (6), Opal (6), Aquamarine (6), Iolite (5), Morganite (5), and Amethyst (5), with additional stones in smaller counts. Treatment varies by stone — turquoise is commonly stabilized, beryl and aquamarine may be heated, and color-enhanced material exists in several lines. Treatment should be disclosed; ask before buying if it isn't specified.
  • What jewelry does faceted cube work best for?
    Faceted cubes shine in pieces where you want geometric structure alongside light play — strung bracelets, station necklaces, and minimalist earring drops where each bead reads as a distinct shape rather than blending into a curve. The corner-drilled orientation makes them sit point-down between knots or spacers, which works well for hand-knotted designs. They pair cleanly with smooth rounds, faceted rondelles, and metal cube spacers. Smaller 2mm–3mm cubes also work as accent beads between larger focals.
  • Faceted cube vs smooth cube vs table-cut — what's the difference?
    A smooth cube has six flat polished faces and no additional faceting. A faceted cube adds beveled corners or small facets at the edges, so light catches at the chamfers as well as the main faces. Table-cut cubes (sometimes sold under that name) typically have larger, deliberate corner facets that read almost as a separate cut. Dakota's faceted cubes sit in the middle — flat primary faces with chamfered edges — giving more sparkle than a smooth cube without losing the geometric silhouette. Check the product photo for the specific facet style on each SKU.