The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they traveled through the computer.
Source Haris Šumić
Sometimes you just need the simplest thing.
Source Fabricio
Prismatic Geometric Tessellation Pattern 4 No Background
Source GDJ
A seamless textured paper for backgrounds. Colored in pale orange hues.
Source V. Hartikainen
From a drawing in 'Line and form', Walter Crane, 1914.
Source Firkin
Abstract Geometric Monochrome Pattern Prismatic No Background
Source GDJ
You know you can’t get enough of these linen-fabric-y patterns.
Source James Basoo
The image depicts meshed silhouettes of various things.The original image is an OCAL clipart called "Enter FOSSASIA 2016 #IoT T-shirt Design Contest" uploaded by "openclipart".Thanks.
Source Yamachem
From a drawing in 'Prose and Verse ', William Linton, 1836.
Source Firkin
From a drawing in 'Uit de geschiedenis der Heilige Stede te Amsterdam', Yohannes Sterck, 1898.
Source Firkin
Background formed from the iconic plastic construction bricks that gave me endless hours of fun when I was a lad.
Source Firkin
White little knobs, coming in at 10x10px. Sweet!
Source Amos
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
Looks a bit like concrete with subtle specks spread around the pattern.
Source Mladjan Antic
Not so subtle. These tileable wood patterns are very useful.
Source Elemis
It’s an egg, in the form of a pattern. This really is 2012.
Source Paul Phönixweiß
Horizontal and vertical lines on a light gray background.
Source Adam Anlauf
Drawn in Paint.net using the kaleidoscope plug-in and vectorised.
Source Firkin
Greyscale version of a pattern that came out of playing with the 'light rays' plug-in for Paint.net
Source Firkin
Remixed from a drawing in 'Canadian forest industries July-December', 1915
Source Firkin
A large pattern with funky shapes and form. An original. Sort of origami-ish.
Source Luuk van Baars
Nothing like a clean set of bed sheets, huh?
Source Badhon Ebrahim
These dots are already worn for you, so you don’t have to.
Source Matt McDaniel
Very dark pattern with some noise and 45-degree lines.
Source Stefan Aleksić