Texture Generator
All Tools
Home/Patterns/Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator

Generators

  • Procedural Brushed Metal Texture
  • Value Noise Ridge Texture Generator
  • Procedural Wood Plank Texture Generator
  • Metallic Mesh Fine Texture Generator

Categories

  • Architectural
  • Nature
  • Sci-Fi
  • Organic

Resources

  • About
  • User Guide
  • PBR Guide
  • Normal Maps
  • Workflow Guide
  • Contact

Legal

  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Procedural Texture Online. Free procedural PBR texture generators for 3D professionals.

260+ generators · 32 categories · 7 languages · No account required

Presets
Style Preset
Material Preset

Recommended: Realistic + Wall

0.15
0.6624000000000001
0
0.58
#f4f4f4
#1a1a1a
PatternsGeometricStripes

Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator

Create seamless stripe patterns with adjustable width, angle, and contrast.

Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator is a browser-based procedural texture tool specialized in stripes, pattern, line surfaces for decorative design and geometric patterns. It provides real-time parameter control with 6 tunable properties, generating seamless, tileable textures with complete PBR map output. Create seamless stripe patterns with adjustable width, angle, and contrast. The generated maps are compatible with all major 3D applications including Blender, Substance Painter, Cinema 4D, Adobe Dimension, requiring no plugins or installation.

Technical Specifications

CategoryPatterns
Generator FamilyGeometric
Generator ArchetypeStripes
Parameter ProfileGeometric Profile
TagsStripes, Pattern, Line
Max Resolution4096 x 4096

Best fits

  • ●Projects requiring seamless, tileable stripes materials at production quality
  • ●Rapid prototyping and material iteration in decorative design and geometric patterns pipelines
  • ●Creating PBR-ready maps for Blender and Substance Painter without external texturing software
  • ●Generating unique texture variations on demand — no two exports need to look identical

Less ideal for

  • ●Photographic reproduction of a specific real-world sample — use photogrammetry or photoscanning instead
  • ●Materials requiring hand-painted artistic detail or deliberate asymmetric composition

Workflow tips

  1. 1Start with StripeWidth to establish the macro appearance, then refine with Contrast for detail control.
  2. 2Toggle between 2D flat preview and 3D lit preview early — some parameter combinations look different under directional lighting.
  3. 3Switch to the Normal map view to verify that surface detail will catch light properly in your target engine.
  4. 4Use the Roughness slider last, after you are happy with the shape and color — it affects perceived brightness and can mislead early decisions.
  5. 5Export at 4096×4096 for hero assets and 2048×2048 for tiling backgrounds to balance quality against VRAM usage.
01

How Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator Works Under the Hood

Geometric patterns benefit from mathematical precision. The seamless tiling guarantee means patterns can be applied at any scale without visible seams, from micro-scale fabric weaves to macro-scale architectural facades. Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator specifically targets stripes, pattern, line characteristics, using layered procedural algorithms to produce results that are visually comparable to photoscanned references while remaining fully parametric. Unlike static textures, every adjustment you make regenerates the complete PBR stack in real time — changing one parameter instantly updates the Base Color, Normal, Roughness, and Height channels simultaneously. This ensures all maps remain physically consistent with each other, preventing the visible artifacts that can occur when mixing maps from different sources.

02

Parameter Guide for Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator

Understanding what each control does helps you reach the look you want faster. **StripeWidth** — Adjusts the stripewidth property of the generated texture. **Contrast** — Increases or decreases the tonal range between light and dark areas, adding visual punch or subtlety. **Angle** — Adjusts the angle property of the generated texture. **ColorA** — Adjusts the colora property of the generated texture. The Roughness parameter deserves special attention: For pattern-based materials, the Roughness map adds tactile realism — glossy tile faces with matte grout lines, or raised printed areas catching light differently from their substrate. A recommended workflow is to lock your Base Color first, then shape the macro form with the primary detail parameter, and only then refine roughness and secondary controls. This prevents the common mistake of over-tweaking multiple sliders simultaneously and losing track of what produced a good result.

03

Where to Use Stripes Textures in Production

The stripes, pattern, line characteristics of this generator make it particularly effective for **Product packaging design**, **UI/UX background textures**, **Fashion fabric mockups**, **Wallpaper and wrapping paper design**. In game development, use the generated maps directly in Blender, Substance Painter, Cinema 4D, Adobe Dimension by importing the exported PNG or JPG files into your material editor. For film and commercial work, the 4096×4096 export resolution provides sufficient detail for full-frame closeup shots. When working in tiled environments (floors, walls, terrain), the seamless tiling guarantee means you can apply the material at any UV scale without visible repetition boundaries.

04

Export and Pipeline Integration Tips

Before exporting, switch between the Base, Height, Roughness, and Normal preview modes to verify that all four maps tell a consistent physical story. A common pitfall is adjusting parameters while viewing only the Base Color and then discovering that the Height map produces unwanted displacement spikes. Export all four maps at the same resolution to maintain texel density consistency. When importing into PBR-compatible engines, assign the Base Color to the Albedo/Diffuse slot, the Normal map to the Normal input (ensure "Normal Map" format is selected), the Roughness map to the Roughness/Smoothness channel (invert for engines that use Smoothness), and the Height map to Displacement or Parallax Occlusion inputs. For Unreal Engine and Unity, applying these maps to a standard PBR material will produce physically accurate results out of the box.

Related generators

Open these next if you want adjacent options in the same material family or category.

Checker Texture GeneratorGeometric Circles Texture GeneratorHexagon Tile Pattern Generator

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this texture seamless?

Yes. All textures produced by this generator tile seamlessly — no visible seams when repeated on large surfaces.

Which map channels can I export?

You can export Base Color, Height, Normal, and Roughness maps, ready to drop into any PBR workflow in Blender, Unity, or Unreal Engine.

Is Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator free to use for commercial projects?

Yes. All textures generated by Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator are free for both personal and commercial use. You can export and use the PBR maps in games, films, product renders, and print materials without attribution requirements.

What PBR maps does Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator export?

Procedural Stripe Pattern Generator generates four PBR texture maps: Base Color (Albedo), Normal Map, Roughness Map, and Height Map. These are compatible with all physically based rendering engines including Blender Principled BSDF, Unreal Engine material system, Unity Standard/HDRP, V-Ray, and Arnold.

Are the generated stripes textures seamlessly tileable?

Yes, every output is mathematically guaranteed to tile seamlessly in all directions. You can apply the texture at any UV scale without visible seams or repetition boundaries. Verify tiling by switching to the 3D preview mode and increasing the UV tiling setting.

What is the maximum export resolution?

You can export textures up to 4096×4096 pixels. For real-time applications like games, 2048×2048 is usually sufficient. For film, VFX, or print work, the full 4096 resolution provides enough detail for extreme closeups.

How do I use the Height map for displacement?

The Height map represents surface elevation — white areas are raised, dark areas are recessed. In Blender, connect it to a Displacement node. In Unreal Engine, use it as a World Position Offset or Tessellation input. In Unity HDRP, apply it to the Displacement Map slot and enable tessellation on the material.