Brown Brick Brown — Brown Rough Sandy Yellow Brick Wall — PBR seamless 3D texture free download

. Formats: WEBP, PNG . Free for personal & commercial use.

Preview — Brown Brick Brown — Brown Rough Sandy Yellow Brick Wall — PBR seamless 3D texture

IDbrown-brick-02-brown-rough-sandy-urban-yellow-brick
Brick
WEBP, PNG
Size1k (1024x1024px), 2k (2048x2048px), 4k (4096x4096px), 8k (8192x8192px)
sRGB

This seamless 3D texture captures the authentic look of brown brick 02 walls combining a rugged rough sandy surface with subtle yellow brick tones that evoke both indoor and outdoor urban environments. The texture replicates the natural mineral composition of fired clay bricks bound by a traditional cementitious mortar that provides structural cohesion and weather resistance. Fine aggregate grains and occasional organic inclusions within the mortar create a varied porosity influencing the tactile roughness and subtle micro-variations in surface height. The finish is matte and unpolished emphasizing a clean yet naturally aged appearance typical of man-made brick walls exposed to moderate environmental wear. Earthy brown and warm yellow pigments are embedded in the base material giving the brick its characteristic chromatic warmth and enhancing realism across lighting conditions.

In this PBR texture set the albedo (BaseColor) map accurately conveys the nuanced color distribution of the brown and yellow bricks while the normal map introduces detailed surface relief to simulate the uneven mortar joints and granular brick faces. The roughness map balances the tactile variation between the slightly porous brick surfaces and the smoother mortar ensuring consistent light scattering and subtle specular highlights. Ambient Occlusion enhances depth perception around crevices and mortar lines complementing the height (displacement) map that allows for realistic parallax and geometric detail in real-time and offline renderers. The metallic channel is appropriately set to zero reflecting the non-metallic ceramic nature of brick materials. This texture is optimized to perform reliably without manual tweaking in modern pipelines supporting both PNG and EXR formats for flexibility.

Available in 4K resolution with an optional 8K upgrade this physically based material is fully tileable and compatible with Blender Unreal Engine and Unity. It supports the metal/rough workflow and includes calibration data to maintain consistent shading across various rendering engines. For optimal results it is recommended to carefully adjust the UV scale to match real-world brick dimensions and fine-tune the roughness map to better suit specific lighting environments especially when simulating wet or weathered conditions. This balance of high detail and performance makes the texture ideal for architectural visualization game environments and any project requiring a realistic seamless brown brick wall appearance that integrates naturally with both indoor and outdoor scenes.

How to Use These Seamless PBR Textures in Blender

This guide shows how to connect a full PBR texture set to Principled BSDF in Blender (Cycles or Eevee). Works with any of our seamless textures free download, including PBR PNG materials for Blender / Unreal / Unity.

What’s inside the download

  • *_albedo.png — Base Color (sRGB)
  • *_normal.png — Normal map (Non-Color)
  • *_roughness.png — Roughness (Non-Color)
  • *_metallic.png — Metallic (Non-Color)
  • *_ao.png — Ambient Occlusion (Non-Color)
  • *_height.png — Height / Displacement (Non-Color)
  • *_ORM.png — Packed map (R=AO, G=Roughness, B=Metallic, Non-Color)

Quick start (Node Wrangler, 30 seconds)

  1. Enable the addon: Edit → Preferences → Add-ons → Node Wrangler.
  2. Create a material and select the Principled BSDF node.
  3. Press Ctrl + Shift + T and select the maps albedo, normal, roughness, metallic (skip height and ORM for now) → Open. The addon wires Base Color, Normal (with a Normal Map node), Roughness, and Metallic automatically.
  4. Add AO and Height using the “Manual wiring” steps below (5 and 6).

Manual wiring (full control)

  1. Create a material (Material Properties → New) and open the Shader Editor.
  2. Add an Image Texture node for each map. Set Color Space:
    • AlbedosRGB
    • AO, Roughness, Metallic, Normal, Height, ORMNon-Color
  3. Connect to Principled BSDF:
    • albedoBase Color
    • roughnessRoughness
    • metallicMetallic (for wood this often stays near 0)
    • normalNormal Map node (Type: Tangent Space) → Normal of Principled. If details look “inverted”, enable Invert Y on the Normal Map node.
  4. Ambient Occlusion (AO):
    • Add a MixRGB (or Mix Color) node in mode Multiply.
    • Input A = albedo, Input B = ao, Factor = 1.0.
    • Output of Mix → Base Color of Principled (replaces the direct albedo connection).
  5. Height / Displacement:
    Cycles — true displacement
    1. Material Properties → SettingsDisplacement: Displacement and Bump.
    2. Add a Displacement node: connect heightHeight, set Midlevel = 0.5, Scale = 0.02–0.08 (tune to taste).
    3. Output of Displacement → Material Output → Displacement.
    4. Add geometry density (e.g., Subdivision Surface) so displacement has polygons to work with.
    Eevee (or lightweight Cycles) — bump only
    1. Add a Bump node: heightHeight.
    2. Set Strength = 0.2–0.5, Distance = 0.05–0.1, and connect Normal output to Principled’s Normal.

Using the packed ORM texture (optional)

Instead of separate AO/Roughness/Metallic maps you can use the single *_ORM.png:

  1. Add one Image Texture (Non-Color) → Separate RGB (or Separate Color).
  2. R (red) → AO (use it in the Multiply node with albedo as above).
  3. G (green) → Roughness of Principled.
  4. B (blue) → Metallic of Principled.

UVs & seamless tiling

  1. These textures are seamless. If your mesh has no UVs, go to UV EditingSmart UV Project.
  2. For scale/repeat, add Texture Coordinate (UV)Mapping and plug it into all texture nodes. Increase Mapping → Scale (e.g., 2/2/2) to tile more densely.

Recommended starter values

  • Normal Map Strength: 0.5–1.0
  • Bump Strength: ~0.3
  • Displacement Scale (Cycles): ~0.03

Common pitfalls

  • Wrong Color Space (normals/roughness/etc. must be Non-Color).
  • “Inverted” details → enable Invert Y on the Normal Map node.
  • Over-strong relief → lower Displacement Scale or Bump Strength.

Example: Download Wood Textures and instantly apply parquet or rustic planks inside Blender for architectural visualization.

To add the downloaded texture, go to Add — Texture — Image Texture.



Add a node and click the Open button.



Select the required texture on your hard drive and connect Color to Base Color.


AITEXTURED Tools

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.