A bit like some carbon, or knitted netting if you will.
Source Anna Litvinuk
Coming in at 666x666px, this is an evil big pattern, but nice and soft at the same time.
Source Atle Mo
Remixed from an image that was uploaded to Pixabay by Pixeline
Source Firkin
There are many carbon patterns, but this one is tiny.
Source Designova
Turn your site into a dragon with this great scale pattern.
Source Alex Parker
Used correctly, this could be nice. Used in a bad way, all hell will break loose.
Source Atle Mo
A seamless pattern with a unit cell drawn as a bitmap in Paint.net and vectorized in Vector Magic.
Source Firkin
A dark metal plate with an embossed grid pattern and a bit of rust. Here's a dark metal plate texture for use as a tiled background on web pages.
Source V. Hartikainen
Derived from an image that was uploaded to Pixabay by Darkmoon1968
Source Firkin
Formed by distorting the inside front cover of 'Diversæ insectarum volatilium : icones ad vivum accuratissmè depictæ per celeberrimum pictorem', Jacob Hoefnagel, 1630.
Source Firkin
Remixed from a design seen in 'Burghley. The Life of William Cecil', William Charlton, 1857.
Source Firkin
Continuing the geometric trend, here is one more.
Source Mike Warner
A mid-tone gray pattern with some cement looking texture.
Source Hendrik Lammers
Tiny, tiny 3D cubes. Reminds me of the good old pattern from k10k.
Source Etienne Rallion
Pattern that came out of playing with the 'slinky' plug-in for Paint.net
Source Firkin
A background pattern with blue on white vertical stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
Prismatic Groovy Concentric Background 2 No Black
Source GDJ
Here's a quite bright pink background pattern for use on websites. It doesn't look like a real fur, but it definitely resembles one.
Source V. Hartikainen
Tweed is back in style – you heard it here first. Also, the @2X version here is great!
Source Simon Leo
A textured orange background pattern with vertical stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
From a drawing in 'Art Embroidery', M.S. Lockwood and E. Glaister, 1878.
Source Firkin
Dark, square, clean and tidy. What more can you ask for?
Source Jaromír Kavan
The classic 45-degree diagonal line pattern, done right.
Source Jorick van Hees
Prismatic Curved Diamond Pattern 8 No Background
Source GDJ