Photorealistic Grass Texture free download

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

Free textures Photorealistic Grass Texture  free download

IDphotorealistic-grass-texture
Grass
WEBP, PNG
Size1k (1024x1024px), 2k (2048x2048px), 4k (4096x4096px), 8k (8192x8192px)
sRGB

The Photorealistic Grass Texture is a meticulously crafted tileable material designed to replicate the organic complexity of natural grass surfaces with exceptional realism. This texture represents a finely balanced composition of organic fibers and natural pigments capturing the subtle variations in blade orientation density and color that characterize healthy grass. The base substrate is an organic matrix emulating the fibrous grass blades intertwined with soil and moisture elements while the colorants include a rich palette of green pigments with natural yellow and brown undertones to reflect seasonal and environmental diversity. The surface finish is matte with slight variability simulating the soft diffuse reflection of grass under natural light conditions and the micro-roughness caused by the fibrous structure and weathering effects such as dew or light wear.

In terms of physically based rendering (PBR) channels the BaseColor (Albedo) map delivers a high-resolution 8K detail layer that defines the vivid and nuanced greens essential for photorealism. The Normal map enhances the perception of individual grass blades and subtle surface undulations adding depth and tactile realism. The Roughness channel is carefully tuned to reflect the semi-matte slightly textured quality of grass allowing for natural light scattering without excessive glossiness. There is no metallic component as grass is purely organic so the Metallic map remains black. Ambient Occlusion is optimized to emphasize the shadows between dense clusters of blades enhancing depth perception and spatial definition. The Height/Displacement map provides fine detail for realistic parallax effects allowing the texture to interact convincingly with dynamic lighting and varying camera angles.

This tileable photorealistic grass texture is ideal for environment art architectural visualization quick look development and concept prototyping across multiple platforms including Blender Unreal Engine and Unity. Its seamless repeatability ensures vast areas can be covered without visible seams or repetitive artifacts maintaining consistent high-resolution detail throughout. For optimal results it is recommended to maintain uniform UV scaling to avoid texture stretching and to adjust roughness slightly to match the specific lighting conditions of your scene. Additionally subtle use of the height/displacement channel can enhance depth perception when working with parallax occlusion mapping further elevating the realism of outdoor and landscape environments.

The seamless photorealistic grass texture showcases an AI texture photorealistic grass texture optimized for realistic grass textures with a detailed 3D preview highlighting its advanced PBR appearance and material composition.

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.