A seamless pattern recreated from an image on Pixabay. It is reminiscent of parquet flooring and is formed from a square tile, which can be recovered in Inkscape by selecting the ungrouped rectangle and using shift-alt-I together.
Source Firkin
To get the tile this is based on, select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
This seamless background image should look nice on websites. It has a dark blue gray texture with vertical stripes, it tiles seamlessly and, like all of the background images here, it's free. So, if you like it, take it!
Source V. Hartikainen
This could be a hippy vintage wallpaper.
Source Tileable Patterns
If you don’t like cream and pixels, you’re in the wrong place.
Source Mizanur Rahman
Remixed from an image on Pixabay uploaded by Prawny
Source Firkin
A new one called white wall, not by me this time.
Source Yuji Honzawa
From a drawing in 'The Quiver of Love', Walter Crane, 1876
Source Firkin
An orange vertically striped background pattern. Feel free to download and use this orange background pattern, for example, on the web). It resembles a wallpaper with vertical stripes or something similar to it.
Source V. Hartikainen
You were craving more leather, so I whipped this up by scanning a leather jacket.
Source Atle Mo
Derived from a drawing in 'The Murmur of the Shells', Samuel Cowen, 1879.
Source Firkin
Lovely light gray floral motif with some subtle shades.
Source GraphicsWall
Dark squares with some virus-looking dots in the grid.
Source Hugo Loning
The image depicts a seamless pattern of a Japanese family crest called "chidori" in Japanese .A chidori in Japanese means a plover in English.
Source Yamachem
Prepared mostly as a raster in Paint.net and vectorised.
Source Firkin
Prismatic Snowflakes Pattern 2 No Background
Source GDJ
A nice and simple gray stucco material. Great on its own, or as a base for a new pattern.
Source Bartosz Kaszubowski
A seamless pattern drawn originally in Paint.net by distorting a slice of background pattern 116 and copying the resulting triangle numerous times.
Source Firkin
The tile this is based on can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i
Source Firkin