Element of beach pattern with background.
Source Rones
From a drawing in 'Artists and Arabs', Henry Blackburn, 1868.
Source Firkin
Prismatic Rounded Squares Grid 3 No Background
Source GDJ
Adapted heavily from a JPG that was uploaded to Pixabay by Viscious-Speed.
Source Firkin
Used correctly, this could be nice. Used in a bad way, all hell will break loose.
Source Atle Mo
Prismatic Abstract Geometric Background 4 No Black
Source GDJ
From a drawing in 'The Quiver of Love', Walter Crane, 1876
Source Firkin
Geometric triangles seem to be quite hot these days.
Source Pixeden
Design drawn in Paint.net, vectorised using Vector Magic and finished in Inkscape.
Source Firkin
Snap! It’s a pattern, and it’s not grayscale! Of course you can always change the color in Photoshop.
Source Atle Mo
So tiny, just 7 by 7 pixels – but still so sexy. Ah yes.
Source Dmitriy Prodchenko
The tile this fill pattern is based on can be had by using shift+alt+i on the rectangle.
Source Firkin
Retro Circles Background 5 No Black
Source GDJ
A green background pattern with warped vertical stripes and a grunge look.
Source V. Hartikainen
So tiny, just 7 by 7 pixels – but still so sexy. Ah yes.
Source Dmitriy Prodchenko
Can never have too many knitting patterns, especially as nice as this.
Source Victoria Spahn
It has waves, so make sure you don’t get sea sickness.
Source CoolPatterns
Could be paper, could be a Polaroid frame – up to you!
Source Chaos
A light gray background pattern with seamless fabric-like texture and almost unnoticeable stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they traveled through the computer.
Source Haris Šumić
To get the tile this is based on, select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
You don’t see many mid-tone patterns here, but this one is nice.
Source Joel Klein
Colorful Floral Background 3 No Black
Source GDJ
Seamless SVG vector and JPG backgrounds with faded diagonal stripes. The colors are editable.
Source V. Hartikainen
It’s big, it’s gradient—and it’s square.
Source Brankic1979