This seamless 3D PBR texture depicts an irregular mosaic pattern composed of smooth, polished stone chips set in light grout. The chips vary in shape and size, with rounded and organic forms, creating an authentic pebble-like mosaic appearance. The color palette features earthy tones like deep maroon, olive green, mustard yellow, cream, muted black, and hints of lavender, blue, and soft pastel hues, adding vibrant warmth and visual interest. Each chip shows subtle surface variation with soft shading and natural-looking highlights that enhance the polished stone finish. The grout lines are thin and consistently cream-colored, providing a clean separation for each stone piece and emphasizing the scattered layout. The texture is tileable and PBR-ready, ensuring realistic rendering with physically accurate material properties. Ideal for architectural visualization, game environments, or 3D modeling, this mosaic texture suits decorative interior floors, courtyard pavements, kitchen backsplashes, or feature walls that require a Mediterranean or rustic charm. It integrates seamlessly with Blender, Unreal Engine, Unity, 3ds Max, Cinema 4D, and other 3D software pipelines, perfect for stylized or realistic scenes aiming to evoke natural stone craftsmanship and artisanal mosaic artistry.
Best Uses for This Texture
seasonal mosaic materials
stylized game props and level dressing
Blender, Unreal Engine and Unity materials
packaging mockups, textile prints and decorative surfaces
tileable backgrounds for archviz, motion graphics and product renders
How to Use These Seamless PBR Textures in Blender
This quick guide shows how to connect a seamless PBR texture set in Blender using
Principled BSDF. The workflow works for tileable materials used in
Blender, Unreal Engine, Unity, archviz, and game environments.
What Is Included
albedo or base color for the visible surface color
normal for fine surface relief
roughness for gloss and reflectivity control
metallic for metal or dielectric response
ao for ambient occlusion in cavities
height for bump, parallax, or displacement
ORM packed maps for optimized real-time workflows
Example node layout for a standard PBR material in Blender.
Quick Start
Open the Shader Editor and create a new material.
Add an Image Texture node for each map you want to use.
Set Color Space to sRGB for Albedo and to Non-Color for Normal, Roughness, Metallic, AO, Height, and ORM.
Connect the maps to the matching inputs on Principled BSDF.
Recommended Connections
Albedo -> Base Color
Roughness -> Roughness
Metallic -> Metallic
Normal -> Normal Map node -> Normal
Height -> Bump or Displacement, depending on your render setup
Add an Image Texture node before assigning the downloaded maps.
Using ORM Maps
If your download includes a packed ORM texture, split its RGB channels:
R = AO, G = Roughness, B = Metallic.
This is useful for Unreal Engine and other optimized real-time pipelines.
Tiling and UV Scale
Because these textures are seamless, you can repeat them across large surfaces without
visible seams. Use a Mapping node to increase or reduce tiling density
on floors, walls, terrain, props, and modular assets.
Common Mistakes
Using sRGB on non-color maps
Connecting a Normal map directly without a Normal Map node
Overdriving Height or Bump values so the surface looks unnatural
Ignoring texture scale, which makes seamless materials look repetitive
Load the downloaded texture set and wire the maps to Principled BSDF.
Build, preview, and export seamless PBR materials. Generate full map sets from a single image, inspect them in a real-time WebGL viewer, and re-package maps for Unreal, Unity, and Blender—directly in your browser.