A very dark spotted twinkle pattern for your twinkle needs.
Source Badhon Ebrahim
More leather, and this time it’s bigger! You know, in case you need that.
Source Elemis
Detailed but still subtle and quite original. Lovely gray shades.
Source Kim Ruddock
An aged paper background tile with smeared and pressed text.
Source V. Hartikainen
Derived from an image that was uploaded to Pixabay by Kaz
Source Firkin
Nice little grid. Would work great as a base on top of some other patterns.
Source Arno Gregorian
Design drawn in Paint.net, vectorised using Vector Magic and finished in Inkscape.
Source Firkin
A dark pattern made out of 3×3 circles and a 1px shadow. This works well as a carbon texture or background.
Source Atle Mo
Prismatic Curved Diamond Pattern 6 No Background
Source GDJ
This is a remix of "flower seamless pattern".I rotated the original image by 90 degrees.This is a seamless pattern of flowers.These horizontal wavy lines are one of Edo patterns which is called "tatewaku or tachiwaku or 立湧" that represents uprising steam or vapor.
Source Yamachem
An alternative colour scheme to the original seamless pattern.
Source Firkin
Run a restaurant blog? Here you go. Done.
Source Andrijana Jarnjak
A dark brown fabric-like background texture with seamless pattern of winding stripes.
Source V. Hartikainen
A seamless texture traced from an image on opengameart.org shared by Scouser.
Source Firkin
Vertical lines with a bumpy, yet crisp, feel to it.
Source Raasa
Looks like an old rug or a computer chip.
Source Patutin Sergey
Prismatic Geometric Tessellation Pattern No Background
Source GDJ
Some more diagonal lines and noise, because you know you want it.
Source Atle Mo
Light gray pattern with an almost wall tile-like appearance.
Source Markus Tinner
It’s big, it’s gradient—and it’s square.
Source Brankic1979
Seamless Prismatic Pythagorean Line Art Pattern No Background. A seamless pattern that includes the original tile (go to Objects / Pattern / Pattern To Objects in Inkscape's menu to extract it).
Source GDJ
Seamless pattern formed from a tile that can be had by selecting the rectangle in Inkscape and using shift-alt-i.
Source Firkin
Tiny, tiny 3D cubes. Reminds me of the good old pattern from k10k.
Source Etienne Rallion
Dare I call this a «flat pattern»? Probably not.
Source Dax Kieran
The basic shapes never get old. Simple triangle pattern.
Source Atle Mo
A blue background wallpaper for websites. It has a seamless texture with vertical stripes. It looks quite nice not only when using as a tiled background on websites, but also on computer desktops.
Source V. Hartikainen