











Abstract EPS Textures — Analog Aesthetics in Digital Form
If your design work feels too flat, too clean, or simply too digital — this collection is here to fix that. Abstract EPS Textures is a curated pack of 30 expressive vector surfaces, crafted from vintage print artifacts and transformed into rich, editable textures. They don’t just decorate your layout — they give it a tactile soul.
🖨 From the Scanner to the Screen
Each texture is based on authentic analog sources:
- facsimiles and photocopies
- dry ink marks and misprints
- registration marks and color calibration bars
- letraset smudges, foil overlays, Pantone separations — and more
What once belonged to the world of print production now becomes a playground for digital design.
🎨 What’s Inside
- 10 abstract graphic compositions — layered, structured, and full of character
- 20 abstract backgrounds — grainy, striped, and delightfully imperfect
- All files are provided in EPS 8.0 format, fully compatible with Illustrator, Photoshop, Affinity, CorelDRAW, and other vector/raster tools
🔧 How to Use
- Combine multiple textures to build complex backgrounds or collage-style artworks
- Experiment with color overlays and blending modes for depth and richness
- Scale endlessly without quality loss — ideal for posters, editorial layouts, digital branding, and print-ready projects
📂 Included in the Pack:
- 30 EPS vector files
- PDF visual guide
- No watermarks, no restrictions — just raw, editable texture goodness
🧠 Note: EPS files can be opened and rasterized at any resolution in Photoshop, but for full vector control, use Illustrator or a compatible vector editor.
These textures feel like a forgotten film roll in a designer’s attic — full of charm, noise, and irregular beauty. Use them boldly. Layer them with purpose. Let your visuals breathe and crackle with analog texture.
Final Thoughts
If you're looking for a practical and visually clean way to build structured layouts, these square grid backgrounds are the perfect tool. They save time, add visual order, and bring a sense of intentionality to every project. Use them as guides, backdrops, or compositional layers — and take your design to the next level.