Marble & Stone Textures for PBR Workflows
Browse 70 free seamless marble & stone textures optimized for PBR Workflows. Every texture downloads as PNG at 1024px, 2048px, or 4096px — power-of-two sizes that PBR Workflows handles efficiently with mipmapping and texture compression. All textures tile perfectly with no visible seams.
Marble and stone textures — marble, concrete, cobblestone, asphalt, plaster, and terrazzo — are essential for architectural visualization, environmental design, and any workflow requiring natural hard surfaces. In PBR pipelines, use the PNG as the Base Color (Albedo) input, then pass it through our Normal Map Generator to produce a matching normal map for realistic light interaction. All textures are procedurally generated and released under our royalty-free license — free for personal and commercial projects with no attribution required.
Marble & Stone Textures
Workflow in PBR Workflows
In a PBR (physically based rendering) workflow, every texture belongs to a channel set — Base Color (sRGB), Normal (linear, Y-axis convention varies), Roughness (linear, 0-1 where 0 is mirror and 1 is diffuse), Metallic (linear, effectively binary in real materials), and AO (linear, multiplies diffuse lighting). Ship the full set together. For the textures here that are sold as colour maps only, pair with the Normal Map tool to derive a normal from the colour or height, and use the Palette Extractor to generate roughness variations. PBR workflows are extremely sensitive to correct colour-space tagging — most render issues come from this.
Quality notes for marble & stone textures
Hard-surface textures (marble, stone, concrete, cobblestone, asphalt, plaster, terrazzo) all share a requirement for accurate scaling. Too-small tiles read as decorative rather than structural; too-large tiles reveal the repeating pattern. Target a UV scale that produces stones roughly 10 to 25 centimetres apart for floor and wall materials. For distant views, higher tile frequencies read cleanly; for close-ups, larger individual stones with more per-tile detail serve better.





