From a drawing in 'Heroes of North African Discovery', Nancy Meugens, 1894.
Source Firkin
A beautiful dark padded pattern, like an old classic sofa.
Source Chris Baldie
Background pattern made in "Grunge-Like" style. Available in both SVG and JPG formats. Edit to your needs then click the download button.
Source V. Hartikainen
The image is a remix of "edo pattern-samekomon".I changed the color of dots from black to white and added BG in light-yellow.
Source Yamachem
A background pattern with blue on white vertical stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
Prismatic Basic Pattern 2 No Background
Source GDJ
The first pattern on here using opacity. Try it on a site with a colored background, or even using mixed colors.
Source Nathan Spady
Turn your site into a dragon with this great scale pattern.
Source Alex Parker
This one needs to be used in small areas; you can see it repeat.
Source Luca
A background pattern inspired by designs seen in 'Burghley. The Life of William Cecil', William Charlton, 1857.
Source Firkin
The rectangular tile this is based on can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i
Source Firkin
Made by distorting a simple pattern using the 'sin waves' plugin for Paint.net and vectorising in Vector Magic
Source Firkin
The image a seamless pattern derived from a weed which I can't identify.The original weed image is from here:https://jp.pinterest.com/pin/500744052301423641/
Source Yamachem
Clean and crisp lines all over the place. Wrap it up with this one.
Source Dax Kieran
A rusty grunge background for websites. Feel free to use it in your site's theme.
Source V. Hartikainen
The image is a seamless pattern of a fishnet.
Source Yamachem
A pattern derived from repeating unit cells each derived from part of a fractal rendering in paint.net.
Source Firkin
Zerro CC tillable texture of stones photographed and made by me. CC0
Source Sojan Janso
Sort of like the Photoshop transparent background, but better!
Source Alex Parker
Just a nice looking textured pattern with faded blue stripes. Well, that's it for today... one background a day, as usual.
Source V. Hartikainen
To get the tile this is based on select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
Tweed is back in style – you heard it here first. Also, the @2X version here is great!
Source Simon Leo
Dark, crisp and subtle. Tiny black lines on top of some noise.
Source Wilmotte Bastien