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Date
June 12, 2026Time reading
5 minutes
When you hear the phrase “5D diamond painting kit,” what might come to mind is a craft kit with plastic or resin drills that are cut with 5 facets per side, for a total of 15 facets. That faceting is what gives finished artworks their light-catching, “diamond” sparkle, and "5D" is what manufacturers put on the label to indicate that. The craft itself is known by several names, from diamond art painting to painting with diamonds and sometimes even diamond mosaics, since each artwork is created from thousands of small drills arranged in a mosaic pattern.
However, facet count is just one of seven factors that contribute to what makes a kit of the highest quality. The other six (drill material, drill trash rate, color stability, canvas adhesive, color count, and drill shape) are often overlooked but can make an enormous difference to the crafting experience. If you're looking for the highest-quality 5D diamond painting kit, you'll need to look beyond facet count. The six other factors rarely get the same attention, yet they often have the greatest impact on the finished result and overall crafting experience. This is the complete picture of what makes a truly premium kit.
A 5D diamond painting kit is similar to a paint-by-numbers kit: containing an adhesive canvas printed with a numbered color grid, a set of resin or acrylic drills (also known as diamonds or gems), an applicator pen, a wax pad, and a sorting tray. You dab the pen tip into the wax, pick up one drill at a time, and place it on the matching square on the canvas. The wax allows you to easily pick up and position the drills, while the canvas’s adhesive keeps them in place long-term.
The term “5D” is used to indicate the number of facets on each side of a single drill. Each tiny drill is shaped like a small pyramid with three sides, and each of these sides is faceted. So, 5D means there should be five facets per side, for a total of 15 facets total per drill. 3D drills have 3 facets per side, for 9 total. This term came from product marketing in the early days of diamond painting and can lead to misconceptions amongst crafters because some kits labelled 5D might actually contain drills that are only 3D due to factors we’ll discuss a little further on.
Facets matter: each facet acts as a small mirror, reflecting light. The more facets a drill has, the more angles there are for light to refract back to the eye, which is the difference between a flat-looking finished diamond painting and a sparkling masterpiece. That sparkle effect is the whole reason crafters reach for higher-facet kits over lower-facet ones.
The short answer is yes, for the sparkle and visual depth. The 15-facet cut is genuinely more reflective than 9-facet or 12-facet alternatives, and most diamond painters agree, you can see the difference.
What the label "5D" on a kit actually tells you is that the manufacturer is aiming for 15 facets per drill. The problem is, some kits sold as "5D" often arrive with 13 facet drills inside, or a mix of 13 and 9 facet drills in the same kit depending on the brand and its standards. A 5D kit from one brand and a 5D kit from another can have meaningfully different drills inside the same box. To buy with confidence, look at both the actual specifications on the label and the quality controls behind the brand.
For the full picture, here are the seven factors that determine a kit’s true quality:

Let’s take a closer look at these criteria, in order of importance to crafters:
DAC crafters see the difference.One Reddit thread on r/diamondpainting (2023) put it plainly: "I only see 5d when I buy the DAC's." Translation: when a brand controls facet count and mold cycle end-to-end, their kits arrive with consistent, fully-faceted drills. When a brand sources from third-party factories, the variance shows up in the bags.
It’s important to remember that the 5D label is just one of seven criteria. The other six are crucial to crafters evaluating a kit for quality.
Round drills (often called round diamonds) are easier to place and forgiving of how straight your alignment is. However, their shape does allow some of the canvas to peek through because the design is laid out on a square grid. Square drills (or square diamonds) on the other hand, snap into place creating crisp edges and full coverage over the entire canvas. Both shapes can be labeled 5D, since 5D describes facet count and not shape. The round vs square decision is driven more by skill level and aesthetic taste, rather than quality.
Skill-level guidance for diamond painters choosing a first or next kit:
Beginners. Start with round-drill kits. Easier placement, more forgiving alignment, less frustration during the first few hours of a project. DAC's 20-facet round drills carry the highest sparkle in this category.
Intermediate. Move to square drills for fuller coverage and crisper detail. DAC's 15-facet squares are among the best the industry markets as 5D.
Advanced and detail-focused. Square drills paired with custom-color canvases. DAC's in-house manufacturing supports proprietary shades for high-detail pieces, which is how source artwork gets matched without color compromise.
Crafters wanting specialty effects. DAC offers Aurora Borealis, Iridescent, Electro, Fairy Dust, and Glow drills that add surface effects on top of the base facet cut and can be combined with either round or square shape.
For a closer look at how kits compare across the category, see you get what you pay for in diamond art and best quality diamond art kits: Diamond Art Club vs competitors.
Diamond Art Club kits are designed to provide an exceptional crafting experience, allowing you to create vibrant, sparkling masterpieces through high-quality manufacturing standards. Unlike generic "5D" labels, we ensure our 5D kits feature resin drills with 15-20 facets by regularly retiring our drill molds. We uphold rigorous standards including hand-mapped colors for accuracy, poured glue application, and the inclusion of DMC numbers to ensure both your creative process and the resulting canvas endure.