From a drawing in 'Kingsdene', Maria Fetherstonehaugh, 1878.
Source Firkin
A seamless pattern from a tile made from a jpg on Pixabay. To get the tile select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
Adapted heavily from a JPG that was uploaded to Pixabay by Viscious-Speed.
Source Firkin
Seamless pattern formed from a tile that can be extracted by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
Prismatic Geometric Pattern Background No Black
Source GDJ
Recreated from a pattern found in 'Az Osztrák-Magyar Monarchia irásban és képben', 1882. To get the tile this is based on select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they traveled through the computer.
Source Haris Šumić
Drawn in Paint.net and vectorised in Vector Magic.
Source Firkin
Mostly just mucked about with the colours and made one of the paths in the lead frame opaque. The glass remains transparent.
Source Firkin
You guessed it – looks a bit like cloth.
Source Peax Webdesign
From a drawing in 'Jardyne's Wife', Charles Wills, 1891.
Source Firkin
Small gradient crosses inside 45-degree boxes, or bigger crosses if you will.
Source Wassim
Remixed from a PNG that was uploaded to Pixabay by k_jprather
Source Firkin
A seamless texture traced from an image on opengameart.org shared by Scouser.
Source Firkin
Greyscale version of a pattern that came out of playing with the 'slinky' plug-in for Paint.net
Source Firkin
Some more diagonal lines and noise, because you know you want it.
Source Atle Mo
Plywood Web Background background image for use in web design.
Source V. Hartikainen
Dark, square, clean and tidy. What more can you ask for?
Source Jaromír Kavan
Seamless , tileable CC-0 texture. Created by my own, feel free to use wherever you want!
Source Linolafett
Prismatic Curved Diamond Pattern 6 No Background
Source GDJ
From a drawing in 'Line and form', Walter Crane, 1914.
Source Firkin
Derived from a drawing in 'At home', J. Sowerby, J. Crane and T. Frederick, 1881.
Source Firkin
This is so subtle you need to bring your magnifier!
Source Carlos Valdez
From a tile that can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
Prismatic Isometric Cube Extra Pattern No Background
Source GDJ