A cellular growth pattern rendered in pure vector, ready to wrap anything. Amber Earth Cell flows dense, organic cell-rings diagonally across the canvas in rust, amber, dark teal and charcoal — like reptile scales redrawn as a geometric vexel study.
Why this beats a stock pattern file: most marketplace patterns are generic repeats. This is an original vexel composition by Dyles Mavis, built path-by-path as true vector art, so it scales to any size — poster, garment, packaging — without a single pixel of quality loss.
Q: What can I use this SVG pattern for?
All-over print apparel, sublimation printing, packaging design, POD storefronts, or any project needing a seamless earth-toned vector texture at unlimited scale.
🎨 Why designers reach for it
- Full vector construction — infinitely scalable with zero quality loss
- Rich earth-tone palette: amber, rust, dark teal, charcoal, cream
- Dense, organic cell-ring texture with real depth and directional flow
- Built specifically for all-over print and sublimation workflows
- Original artwork, not a filtered stock photo or AI-generic tile
📋 File specs
- Format: SVG vector file
- Fully scalable, seamless-ready pattern
- Instant digital download after purchase
🎨 Who it's for
- The POD designer sourcing an earth-toned pattern that hasn't been used a thousand times already
- A sublimation printer who needs vector precision at large format
- Anyone building an all-over print product line who wants original, ownable art
FAQ
What file format do I receive?
An SVG vector file, delivered as an instant digital download after checkout.
Can this pattern be resized without quality loss?
Yes — as true vector art, it scales to any dimension, from a phone case to a full garment run, without pixelation.
Is this pattern seamless?
It's built to tile cleanly for all-over print and sublimation applications.
What can I use this design for?
Apparel, packaging, print-on-demand products, and any commercial design project per the license included with your download.
Who created the Amber Earth Cell pattern?
Dyles Mavis, the artist behind Aesthetic Rebellion — an original vexel-style vector composition.