And some more testing, this time with Seamless Studio. It’s Robots FFS!
Source Seamless Studio
Prismatic Curved Diamond Pattern 6 No Background
Source GDJ
Remixed from a design seen in 'Burghley. The Life of William Cecil', William Charlton, 1857.
Source Firkin
Seamless pattern formed from a tile that can be extracted by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
From a tile that can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
This background pattern has futuristic look. So, maybe it could be used on websites or blogs dedicated to video games?!
Source V. Hartikainen
A heavy dark gray base, some subtle noise and a 45-degree grid makes this look like a pattern with a tactile feel to it.
Source Atle Mo
A seamless dark leather-like background texture with diagonal lines that look like stitches.
Source V. Hartikainen
8 by 8 pixels, and just what the title says.
Source pixilated
More in the paper realm, this time with fibers.
Source Jorge Fuentes
A nice looking light gray background pattern with diagonal stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
This was formed by distorting an image of a background on Pixabay.
Source Firkin
Not a flat you live inside, like in the UK – but a flat piece of cardboard.
Source Appleshadow
Zero CC tileable hard cover cells, skin like, book texture. 4K, Scanned and made by me CC0
Source Sojan Janso
Remixed from an image that was uploaded to Pixabay by Pixeline
Source Firkin
A re-make of the Gradient Squares pattern.
Source Dimitar Karaytchev
Orange-red pattern for tiled backgrounds.
Source V. Hartikainen
Thin lines, noise and texture creates this crisp dark denim pattern.
Source Marco Slooten
Inspired by a 1930s wallpaper pattern I saw on TV.
Source Firkin
Remixed from a drawing in 'The March of Loyalty', Letitia MacClintock, 1884.
Source Firkin
This one needs to be used in small areas; you can see it repeat.
Source Luca
Dark, lines, noise, tactile. You get the drift.
Source Anatoli Nicolae
The unit cell for this seamless pattern can be had in Inkscape by selecting the rectangle and using shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
A seamless pattern the starting point for which was a 'colour modulo' texture in Paint.net.
Source Firkin
The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they traveled through the computer.
Source Haris Šumić
This is the third pattern called Dark Denim, but hey, we all love them!
Source Brandon Jacoby