A free light orange brown wallpaper with vertical stripes designed for use as a tiled background on websites. An yet another background pattern with vertical stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
A seamless paper background texture colored in pale yellow. This seamless texture is ideal for those who need a yellow background image for their website. The texture resembles paper.
Source V. Hartikainen
Clean and crisp lines all over the place. Wrap it up with this one.
Source Dax Kieran
We have some linen patterns here, but none that are stressed. Until now.
Source Jordan Pittman
More carbon fiber for your collections. This time in white or semi-dark gray.
Source Badhon Ebrahim
One more from Badhon, sharp horizontal lines making an embossed paper feeling.
Source Badhon Ebrahim
Redrawn based on a drawing in 'По Сѣверо-Западу Россіи' Konstantin Sluchevsky, 1897.
Source Firkin
Inspired by a drawing in 'Kulturgeschichte', Freidrich Hellwald, 1896.
Source Firkin
A large pattern with funky shapes and form. An original. Sort of origami-ish.
Source Luuk van Baars
This pack of filters can help you adding a blocky overlay to objects. May come handy at drawing blocks of stone.
Source Lazur URH
Imagine you zoomed in 1000X on some fabric. But then it turned out to be a skeleton!
Source Angelica
A chequerboard pattern with a fruit theme. The fruits are from a posting by inkscapeforum.it.
Source Firkin
ZeroCC tileable stone texture, edited from pixabay, CC0
Source Sojan Janso
Zerro CC tillable texture of stones photographed and made by me. CC0
Source Sojan Janso
If you don’t like cream and pixels, you’re in the wrong place.
Source Mizanur Rahman
A seamless pattern formed from miutopia mug remixes on a tablecloth.
Source Firkin
From a drawing in 'Artists and Arabs', Henry Blackburn, 1868
Source Firkin
The image depicts a seamless pattern which includes hexagonally-aligned gourds with BG in light-brown.
Source Yamachem
Otis Ray Redding was an American soul singer-songwriter, record producer, arranger, and talent scout. So you know.
Source Thomas Myrman
The tile this is based on can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i
Source Firkin