Star Cut Beads
With 20 facets, a star cut gemstone enhances even the most intense colors. It is also one of few cuts where facets and matte finish combine to highlight the subtlest of colors, like rose quartz or moonstone. Star cut stones carry the same visual weight as a similarly sized bead but have less physical weight than a round or traditional faceted round, making it great for lightweight designs.
Products: 43
African Turquoise 6mm Star Cut Coin A Grade - 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 detailsAstrophyllite 8mm Star Cut Coin - 15-16 Inch
Astrophyllite is a very rare, brown to golden-yellow hydrous potassium iron titanium silicate mineral. Astrophyllite gets its name from the Greek w...
View full detailsBlack Rutilated Quartz 6mm Star Cut Coin A Grade - 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 detailsChrysocolla 6mm Star Cut Coin - 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 detailsChrysocolla 8mm Star Cut Coin - 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 detailsGreen Garnet 6mm Star Cut Coin - 15-16 Inch
Green Garnet can be among the most valuable of garnets, which come in a variety of colors. Occurring in sizes ranging from a grain of sand to the s...
View full detailsLabradorite 6mm Star Cut Coin 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 detailsRed Creek Jasper 6mm Star Cut Coin - 15-16 Inch
Red Creek Jasper is named for the Red River in china where the stone was recently discovered. Its colors include burnt red, mustard yellow, olive g...
View full detailsRed Hematoid Quartz 8mm Star Cut Coin - 15-16 Inch
Hematoid Quartz is Quartz with inclusions of hematite. The hematite inclusions are responsible for the stone’s color, which can be yellow, orange, ...
View full detailsRose Quartz 6mm Star Cut Coin - 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 detailsSmoky Quartz 6mm Star Cut Coin - 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 detailsSodalite 8mm Star Cut Coin A Grade - 15-16 Inch
Sodalite is named for its sodium content and may be classified as a feldspathoid. Blue Sodalite is sometimes referred to as “poor man’s lapis” beca...
View full detailsWhite Howlite 8mm Star Cut Coin - 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 detailsAbout this cut
Frequently asked questions
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What is a star cut bead?
A star cut bead is a round-profile bead faceted into a multi-pointed star pattern, with triangular facets radiating from the drill hole to a defined equator. The result reads as a faceted sphere at a distance but throws sharper, more directional light than a standard faceted round because the facet geometry is organized around points rather than a uniform grid. Star cuts are center-drilled through the axis and strand like a faceted round, so they substitute cleanly in any design that calls for a 6mm or 8mm faceted bead but wants more visible sparkle and surface variation. -
What sizes does Dakota stock in star cut?
Dakota currently stocks star cut beads primarily in 6mm and 8mm, which together account for most of the 72 active SKUs in this cut. 8mm leads with 34 products and 6mm follows with 31, so those are the working sizes for most designs. 4mm shows up in a handful of stones (4 products) for spacer and accent use, and 10mm is available in a single SKU. Star cuts hold their facet definition best at 6mm and above — below 4mm the facets get too small to read as a star and the bead looks like a textured round. Sizes per product appear on each listing. -
What stones does Dakota carry in star cut?
Star cut runs across a broad range of materials. Current stock includes quartz (7 products), sardonyx (6), labradorite (5), sodalite, rose quartz, garnet, agate, lapis and aquamarine (4 each), and moonstone (3), plus a long tail of other stones. The cut works in both translucent stones (quartz, rose quartz, aquamarine, moonstone) where the facets catch internal light, and in opaque stones (sodalite, lapis, sardonyx, agate) where the facets create surface highlights. Treatment varies by stone — dyeing on agate, heat on some quartz, stabilization on softer materials — check the individual listing or ask before buying if it isn't specified. -
What jewelry does star cut work best for?
Star cut suits designs that want more visible sparkle than a smooth round but don't need the uniform geometry of a standard faceted round. It performs well in strung necklaces and bracelets where the bead rotates against the skin and catches light from multiple angles, and in earrings where a single 6mm or 8mm bead carries a drop. It also reads cleanly as a focal in stretch bracelets, where the faceting breaks up the visual repetition of a plain round strand. Pair with smooth rounds or rondelles of the same stone to let the star cut carry the sparkle. -
How does star cut differ from a standard faceted round?
A standard faceted round uses a uniform grid of small facets — typically 64 or 96 — distributed evenly across the sphere. A star cut organizes the facets into radial points, so light reflects in distinct flashes rather than the more diffuse sparkle of a faceted round. Star cuts also tend to read with slightly more surface depth because the facets are larger and the angles more varied. Functionally they're interchangeable in stringing — same drill, same approximate diameter — but visually the star cut is the more decorative choice and the faceted round is the more neutral one.