Fabric Texture Generator
Use the fabric texture generator to create repeatable linen, denim, canvas, wool, knit, upholstery, and cloth surfaces for fashion concepts, interior boards, mockups, and 3D materials.

Where fabric textures fit
Textile swatches, upholstery boards, clothing mockups, woven material studies, and soft 3D cloth surfaces.
Details to include
Use fabric type, weave structure, thread scale, fiber roughness, palette, motif size, and top-down repeat language.
What to inspect
Large motifs, diagonal seams, wrinkles, logos, or text often reveal the square tile when the fabric repeats.
Use this page when a generic texture prompt is too broad
A fabric texture needs different scale, lighting, and repeat checks than other material families. This page narrows the prompt around fabric surfaces, then points you to related pages when another material would be a better fit.
Best destination surfaces
Linen, denim, canvas, wool, and knit texture studies, Interior upholstery and soft furnishing boards, 3D cloth material previews for Blender or product scenes, Fashion, packaging, and textile surface mockups.
First prompt to test in the generator
natural linen fabric texture, plain weave, beige fibers, subtle slub variation, top-down seamless tile
When to choose another page
If the result needs a different surface logic, compare Wallpaper Pattern Generator, Wood Texture Generator, Marble Texture Generator.
Start with prompts shaped for fabric textures
These are intentionally specific enough to guide material style, scale, lighting, and repeat behavior without locking you into a single finished asset.
natural linen fabric texture, plain weave, beige fibers, subtle slub variation, top-down seamless tile
dark denim fabric texture, diagonal twill weave, indigo thread detail, subtle wear, tileable square material
heavy black canvas texture, coarse woven threads, low-contrast fiber highlights, seamless cloth tile
soft boucle upholstery fabric, tiny looped fibers, warm ivory palette, even repeat, no wrinkles
woven cotton textile pattern, small geometric motif, muted blue and cream palette, seamless repeat tile
Build a usable tile before polishing the material
Pick the textile structure first
Call out linen, cotton, denim, wool, canvas, silk, knit, boucle, or jacquard before adding color or pattern details.
Lock scale and thread detail
Use scale words like tight weave, coarse thread, fine fibers, small motif, dense repeat, or broad yarn to avoid vague cloth output.
Choose texture or textile pattern
For realistic cloth, emphasize weave and fiber. For print design, emphasize motif spacing, repeat rhythm, and palette control.
Test in the final context
Preview the tile on apparel mockups, upholstery boards, product packaging, or 3D cloth before downloading the final PNG.
Practical tips for better fabric repeats
Use these checks before exporting. The goal is a texture that still looks natural when repeated across a floor, wall, fabric sample, mockup, or 3D material.
Keep motifs smaller than the tile
Large flowers, logos, centered icons, and text often expose the repeat. Smaller motifs and all-over layouts are safer.
Name the weave
Plain weave, twill, ribbed knit, boucle, herringbone, jacquard, canvas, and denim give the generator clearer fabric structure.
Avoid wrinkle-driven prompts
Wrinkles, folds, and draped cloth can look realistic in a single image but often tile poorly across a broad surface.
Use wallpaper for flat motif repeats
Choose the wallpaper pattern page when the motif is the main job. Use this page when fiber, weave, cloth scale, or textile material feel matters.
Keep exploring texture clusters

Create repeatable wallpaper patterns, decorative motifs, surface design studies, and print-ready visual directions for interiors, packaging, and textile exploration.

Draft repeatable wood textures for planks, grain studies, bark, carved props, flooring, wall panels, furniture mockups, and 3D scenes.

Create polished marble, veined stone, terrazzo-adjacent, and luxury surface tiles for interiors, packaging, product mockups, and 3D material studies.
Fabric texture questions
Can I make seamless fabric textures for print mockups?
Yes. Generate or convert the fabric tile, inspect the 2x2 repeat, then test the PNG in an apparel, upholstery, packaging, or textile mockup.
What fabric prompts work best for seamless results?
Prompts with fabric type, weave structure, thread scale, fiber roughness, color palette, top-down view, and seamless repeat instructions work best.
Should I use this page or the wallpaper pattern generator?
Use this page for cloth, weave, textile, denim, linen, canvas, wool, or upholstery surfaces. Use wallpaper for flat decorative motif repeats.
Generate a fabric texture
Open the texture studio, start from one of these prompts, and check the repeat before downloading your PNG.