A version without colours blended together to give a different look.
Source Firkin
Tiny little flowers growing on your screen. Nice, huh?
Source Themes Tube
This is the remix of "blue wave-seigaiha".The image depicts a seamless pattern of the front upper part of Japanese five yen coin which is used currently.This design represents a rice with ripe golden ears.
Source Yamachem
We have some linen patterns here, but none that are stressed. Until now.
Source Jordan Pittman
Zero CC tileable dry grass texture, photographed and made by me. CC0
Source Sojan Janso
I asked Gjermund if he could make a pattern for us – result!
Source Gjermund Gustavsen
A seamless web background with texture of aged grid paper.
Source V. Hartikainen
Stefan is hard at work, this time with a funky pattern of squares.
Source Stefan Aleksić
A simple bump filter made upon request at irc #inkscape at freenode. Made a screen capture of the making here: https://youtu.be/TGAWYKVLxQw
Source Lazur URH
This pack of filters can help you adding a blocky overlay to objects. May come handy at drawing blocks of stone.
Source Lazur URH
This one takes you back to math class. Classic mathematic board underlay.
Source Josh Green
Someone was asking about how to achieve a fur pattern at #inkscape irc so tried to make a filter on it. Flood filled fractal noises rigged together. May someone find a good use for these.
Source Lazur URH
This is a seamless pattern of regular hexagon which has a honeycomb structure.
Source Yamachem
Prismatic Abstract Background Design No Black
Source GDJ
Prismatic Groovy Concentric Background
Source GDJ
Number 4 in a series of 5 beautiful patterns. Can be found in colors on the submitter’s website.
Source Janos Koos
Based on an image that was uploaded to Pixabay by devanath
Source Firkin
A beautiful dark wood pattern, superbly tiled.
Source Omar Alvarado
Seamless Light Background Texture.
Source V. Hartikainen
Geometric triangles seem to be quite hot these days.
Source Pixeden
No idea what Nistri means, but it’s a crisp little pattern nonetheless.
Source Markus Reiter
Different from the original in being a simple tile stored as a pattern definition, rather than numerous repeated objects. Hence easy and quick to give this pattern to objects of different shapes. To get the tile in Inkscape, select the rectangle and use shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
Derived from a drawing in 'Elfrica. An historical romance of the twelfth century', Charlotte Boger, 1885
Source Firkin