A repeating background for websites with a texture of black groove stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
A mid-tone gray pattern with some cement looking texture.
Source Hendrik Lammers
Just like your old suit, all striped and smooth.
Source Alex Berkowitz
Same as Silver Scales, but in black. Turn your site into a dragon with this great scale pattern.
Source Alex Parker
A cute x, if you need that sort of thing.
Source Juan Scrocchi
That’s what it is, a dark dot. Or sort of carbon looking.
Source Tsvetelin Nikolov
A seamless pattern formed from cross 4. To get the original tile select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
One more updated pattern. Not really carbon fiber, but it’s the most popular pattern, so I’ll give you an extra choice.
Source Atle Mo
Run a restaurant blog? Here you go. Done.
Source Andrijana Jarnjak
This pack of filters can help you adding a blocky overlay to objects. May come handy at drawing blocks of stone.
Source Lazur URH
To get the tile this is based on, select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
ZeroCC tileable stone texture, edited from pixabay. CC0
Source Sojan Janso
A seamless pattern with a unit cell drawn as a bitmap in Paint.net and vectorized in Vector Magic.
Source Firkin
This is lovely, just the right amount of subtle noise, lines and textures.
Source Richard Tabor
Prismatic Abstract Geometric Background 4
Source GDJ
A seamless pattern formed from background pattern 102
Source Firkin
Prismatic Geometric Pattern Background 2 No Black
Source GDJ
The classic 45-degree diagonal line pattern, done right.
Source Jorick van Hees
A seamlessly tile-able grunge background image.
Source V. Hartikainen
Seamless pattern formed from a tile that can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i
Source Firkin
Super simple but very nice indeed. Gray with vertical stripes.
Source Merrin Macleod
Pass parameters to the URL or edit the source code variables to configure the graph paper for the division desired.
Source JayNick
To get the tile this is formed from select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
This is lovely, just the right amount of subtle noise, lines and textures.
Source Richard Tabor
A seamless pattern from a tile drawn in Paint.net and vectorised in Vector Magic
Source Firkin