Prismatic Geometric Tessellation Pattern No Background
Source GDJ
From a drawing in 'Line and form', Walter Crane, 1914.
Source Firkin
Prismatic Curved Diamond Pattern 3 No Background
Source GDJ
From a drawing in 'Bond Slaves. The story of a struggle.', Isabella Varley, 1893.
Source Firkin
A seamless background drawn in Paint.net and vectorised with Vector Magic. The starting point was a photograph of drinking straws from Pixabay.
Source Firkin
And some more testing, this time with Seamless Studio. It’s Robots FFS!
Source Seamless Studio
From a tile that can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift+alt+i.
Source Firkin
White little knobs, coming in at 10x10px. Sweet!
Source Amos
Zerro CC tillable texture of stones photographed and made by me. CC0
Source Sojan Janso
Prismatic Groovy Concentric Background
Source GDJ
The following repeating website background is colored in a blue gray color and resembles a concrete wall or something similar to it.
Source V. Hartikainen
From a drawing in 'Jardyne's Wife', Charles Wills, 1891.
Source Firkin
Prismatic Curved Diamond Pattern No Background
Source GDJ
Background formed from the original with an emboss effect.
Source Firkin
To get the tile this is based on select the rectangle in Inkscape and use shift-alt-i
Source Firkin
Derived from a JPG that was uploaded to Pixabay by ractapopulous
Source Firkin
Prismatic Hexagonalist Pattern No Background
Source GDJ
A new one called white wall, not by me this time.
Source Yuji Honzawa
From a design found in 'History of the Virginia Company of London; with letters to and from the first Colony, never before printed', Edward Neill, 1869.
Source Firkin
Remixed from a drawing in 'Works. Popular edition', John Ruskin, 1886.
Source Firkin
A seamless texture traced from an image on opengameart.org shared by Scouser.
Source Firkin
This is the remix of "Strawberry Pattern Background" uploaded by "GDJ". Thanks. I realigned strawberries so as to get seamless and changed the BG color.
Source Yamachem
Derived from a drawing in 'Historiske Afhandlinger', Adolf Jorgensen, 1898.
Source Firkin
The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they traveled through the computer.
Source Haris Šumić