Inspired by a drawing seen in 'City of Liverpool', James Picton, 1883.
Source Firkin
A seamless background pattern of dark brown wood planks.
Source V. Hartikainen
Colorful Floral Background 3 No Black
Source GDJ
Light square grid pattern, great for a “DIY projects” sort of website, maybe?
Source Rafael Almeida
From a drawing in 'Cowdray: the history of a great English House', Julia Roundell, 1884.
Source Firkin
Dark and hard, just the way we like it. Embossed triangles makes a nice pattern.
Source Ivan Ginev
A free seamless texture of reptile skin colored in a dark brown color. As always, you may use it as a repeated background image in your web design works, or for any other purposes.
Source V. Hartikainen
Nice little grid. Would work great as a base on top of some other patterns.
Source Arno Gregorian
Prismatic Triangular Background Design Mark II 5
Source GDJ
Never out of fashion and so much hotter than the 45º everyone knows, here is a sweet 60º line pattern.
Source Atle Mo
Remixed from a design seen on Pixabay. The basic tile can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
Design drawn in Paint.net, vectorised using Vector Magic and finished in Inkscape.
Source Firkin
Remixed from a drawing that was uploaded to Pixabay by ractapopulous
Source Firkin
Tile available in Inkscape using shift-alt-i on the selected rectangle
Source Firkin
More tactile goodness. This time in the form of some rough cloth.
Source Bartosz Kaszubowski
Zero CC tileable yellow craft paper; scanned and made by me. CC0
Source Sojan Janso
The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they traveled through the computer.
Source Haris Šumić
Prismatic Hexagonalist Pattern No Background
Source GDJ
Alternative colour scheme for the original floral pattern.
Source Firkin
Run a restaurant blog? Here you go. Done.
Source Andrijana Jarnjak
Prismatic Abstract Background Design
Source GDJ
A re-make of the Gradient Squares pattern.
Source Dimitar Karaytchev
One more brick pattern. A bit more depth to this one.
Source Benjamin Ward