Gemstone Tube Beads
Our tube bead collection includes drilled gemstone beads that can be rounded or squared, offering a different design esthetic with each. We also have metal crimp tubes that make great end pieces for your designs.
Products: 47
African Turquoise 2x4mm Tube Beads - 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 detailsTiger Eye 2x4mm Tube Beads - 15-16 Inch
Tiger Eye is a macrocrystalline Quartz stone with bands of rich golds and browns. Its chatoyant layers that create a flash which seems to emanate f...
View full detailsMoss Agate 2x4mm Tube Beads - 15-16 Inch
Moss Agate is a variety of Chalcedony, clear to milky white to dark green, with inclusions that appear in patterns similar to moss or lichen. The i...
View full detailsCarnelian 2x4mm Tube Beads - 15-16 Inch
Carnelian is a glassy, translucent stone that can appear with such bright orange hues that the ancient Egyptians called it “the setting sun.” Most ...
View full detailsLabradorite 2x4mm Tube Beads - 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 detailsLapis 2x4mm Tube Beads - 15-16 Inch
Lapis is a semi to precious stone and one of the most sought after throughout history. It is highly regarded for its beautiful blue color flecked w...
View full detailsWhite Howlite 2x4mm Tube Beads - 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 detailsMother of Pearl 3x5mm White Tube Bead - 15-16 Inch
Mother of Pearl, also known as Nacre, is an iridescent composite of organic and inorganic material most known for being the coating of pearls. It i...
View full detailsSpiny Oyster 4x8mm Red Tube Bead - 15-16 Inch
Spiny Oyster 4x8mm Tube Bead - 15-16 Inch
About this cut
Frequently asked questions
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What is a tube bead?
A tube bead is a cylindrical bead — flat or slightly rounded on the ends, with straight or gently curved sides — drilled lengthwise through the long axis so the bead lies parallel to the stringing material. Tubes can be short and stubby (like a 2x4mm) or long and pencil-like (like a 5x8-8x20mm graduated tube). The cut is typically smooth-polished rather than faceted, and the geometry sits flush against neighbors on a strand, making it useful for clean linear designs and spacer runs. -
What sizes does Dakota stock in tube?
Dakota currently stocks tube beads across a wide size range. The most-stocked sizes are 4mm (cube-tube and short tube formats), 2mm (small spacer tubes), and 7x10mm (a workhorse mid-size). Also in stock: 2x4mm short tubes, 8mm, 4x8mm, 3x5mm, and graduated 5x8-8x20mm strands where the bead size steps up across the strand. Exact dimensions and drill hole size should be disclosed — confirm before buying if your finding or wire gauge is tight. -
What stones come in tube cut at Dakota?
Tube is currently stocked in labradorite, natural shell, turquoise, quartz, jasper, amazonite, rose quartz, lion's paw, prehnite, and pietersite, among others — 72 active products in total. Softer materials (shell, lion's paw) and harder silicates (quartz, jasper, amazonite) both cut well as tubes because the geometry doesn't require sharp facet work. Treatment varies by stone — stabilization is common on turquoise and some shell, so check the listing for the specific strand. -
What jewelry works best with tube beads?
Tubes shine in linear designs: bar necklaces, tennis-style bracelets, ladder earrings, and any layout where you want beads to sit flush end-to-end without rolling. Short tubes (2x4mm, 3x5mm) work as spacers between focal beads or as accent runs in mixed-media designs. Longer tubes (7x10mm, 4x8mm) carry as the primary element on simpler strung necklaces. The flat ends also pair cleanly with disc and heishi beads where you want a stacked architectural look. -
How do tubes differ from rondelles or cubes?
All three are non-spherical, but the drill direction and proportions differ. A rondelle is drilled through its short axis (the bead is wider than it is tall along the string). A tube is drilled through its long axis (the bead is longer than it is wide along the string). A cube is roughly equal on all sides. That means tubes give you visual length per bead — useful when you want to cover more strand with fewer beads — while rondelles give you density and cubes give you a blockier silhouette.