Horizontal and vertical lines on a light gray background.
Source Adam Anlauf
A background pattern with blue on white vertical stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
Never out of fashion and so much hotter than the 45º everyone knows, here is a sweet 60º line pattern.
Source Atle Mo
A grid of squares with green colours. Since the colours are randomly distributed it is automatically seamless.
Source Firkin
Dark, square, clean and tidy. What more can you ask for?
Source Jaromír Kavan
More bright luxury. This is a bit larger than fancy deboss, and with a bit more noise.
Source Viszt Péter
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
Lovely pattern with some good-looking non-random noise lines.
Source Zucx
A seamless background drawn in Paint.net and vectorised with Vector Magic. The starting point was a photograph of drinking straws from Pixabay.
Source Firkin
Black & white version of a pattern that came out of playing with the 'light rays' plug-in for Paint.net
Source Firkin
Prismatic Geometric Pattern Background 2
Source GDJ
The tile for this is based on a repeating unit close to a design on Pixabay. It can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
Zero CC tillable hard cover red book with X shape marks. Scanned and made by me.
Source Sojan Janso
Light and tiny, just the way you like it.
Source Rohit Arun Rao
After 1 comes 2, same but different. You get the idea.
Source Hendrik Lammers
This is a grid, only it’s noisy. You know. Reminds you of those printed grids you draw on.
Source Vectorpile
If you don’t like cream and pixels, you’re in the wrong place.
Source Mizanur Rahman
Neat little photography icon pattern.
Source Hossam Elbialy
Prismatic Rounded Squares Grid 4 No Background
Source GDJ
Utilising a bird from s-light and some flowers from Almeidah. To get the unit tile, select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
Classy golf-pants pattern, or crossed stripes if you will.
Source Will Monson
A seamless pattern based on a square tile that can be retrieved in Inkscape by selecting the rectangle and using shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin