The Complete Guide

How Diamond Painting Works

If you can match a number to a colour, you can do this. Here’s exactly how a 5D kit works — from opening the box to hanging the finished piece.

Five simple steps

No experience needed. Most makers get the rhythm within the first ten minutes.

1️⃣

Set up

Lay the canvas flat, pour a colour of drills into the tray, and give it a shake so they sit face-up.

2️⃣

Peel

Fold back a small section of the protective film to reveal the sticky, colour-coded canvas.

3️⃣

Pick up

Dip the pen tip in wax, then touch a numbered drill — it lifts straight out of the tray.

4️⃣

Place

Press each drill onto its matching symbol. Work one colour and one small area at a time.

5️⃣

Seal & frame

Press the finished canvas flat, seal if you like, and frame it. Done.

What’s in the box

Every 5D Diamond Painting kit arrives complete — there’s nothing extra to buy:

  • Pre-glued HD canvas — printed, colour-coded and covered with a protective film over a strong poured-glue layer.
  • DMC-matched drills — numbered, bagged and sorted, with surplus in every colour so you never run short.
  • Drill pen & wax — the pen picks up each drill; the wax makes it grip.
  • Grooved tray — tip drills in, shake, and they line up face-up ready to lift.
  • Instructions — a quick-start card so you’re placing drills within minutes.

Round vs square drills

Both are full-drill on every kit — the difference is the finish:

DrillBest forFinish
RoundBeginners, large pieces, relaxed paceFast, forgiving, soft twinkle
SquareDetail lovers, framing, a crisp lookEdge-to-edge, gap-free, gallery-sharp

Not sure? Start round on your first kit — it’s the easiest way in. You can always go square once you’ve got the rhythm.

Pro tips for a flawless finish

  • Work top to bottom so your hand rests on the covered film, not on placed drills.
  • Only peel back a small section of film at a time to keep the glue tacky.
  • Finish one colour at a time in each area — fewer swaps, faster progress.
  • Press the whole canvas flat with a book or rolling pin when you’re done to lock every drill in.
  • Run short on a colour? Ask us for free replacement drills — for life.

How long does a kit take? A small 20×20 cm canvas is an evening or two; a large, detailed 40×50 cm piece is around 12–20 hours spread over a few relaxing sessions. See the size guide for time estimates by size.

Fixing common issues

Diamond painting is wonderfully forgiving, but a few small things trip up newcomers. Here’s how to solve them in seconds:

  • Drills won’t stick. The glue has dried out from too much film peeled back, or dust has settled on it. Only expose a small area at a time, and press each drill down firmly.
  • Drills sit crooked or gap. Nudge them straight with the pen tip while the glue is still tacky, then press a row flat with a ruler so they align edge to edge.
  • The pen won’t pick up drills. Add a small dab of wax to the tip — but only a little, as too much leaves residue.
  • The canvas is curling. Lay it flat under a few books overnight, or roll it gently the opposite way before you start.

Finishing and displaying your piece

When the final drill is placed, lay a clean sheet over the canvas and press the whole surface flat with a rolling pin or heavy book — this seats every drill firmly into the glue. If you’d like extra hold and shine, you can brush on a sealer, though many makers skip it to keep maximum sparkle. From there, frame it, mount it on stretcher bars, or hang it with adhesive strips. Full-drill coverage and DMC-true colour mean your finished canvas reads like real wall art, so give it pride of place where daylight can move across the surface. For a full walkthrough, see our guide on framing a finished diamond painting.

Ready to start?

Pick a design you’ll love looking at every day. Browse all kits, ease in with a beginner-friendly kit, or make one from your own photo. New buyers: read a few custom order tips and our FAQ first.

Shop Diamond Painting Kits