Elm - Pinkish, Herringbone
Elm timber traditionally comes from species such as Ulmus procera and Ulmus americana and was historically widespread across Europe and North America. Although elm populations declined due to Dutch elm disease, the timber is still occasionally available from managed sources. Elm has a distinctive interlocking grain and coarse texture which gives the wood strength and resistance to splitting. It has moderate durability and is often used in furniture, joinery and decorative woodworking.
A seamless wood texture with elm - pinkish arranged in a herringbone pattern. Seamless textures can be tiled repeatedly across a surface without visible seams making them useful for architectural drawings and 3D models. This image can be used as a SketchUp texture, Revit material or imported into Photoshop for use in 2D illustrations. A high resolution version of this texture is available, as well as CAD hatches and PBR maps with Architextures Pro.