Until today, it is possible to find tessellation patterns on the facades of buildings and load-bearing structure designs in today's architectural environment, as it is used in floor coverings, wall and ceiling decorations, ornaments and landscape designs. Tesselations created with geometric shapes also support design alternatives by using them in the architectural production process. Geometry plays a central role in architecture contributes to the development of architecture by helping design, construct, analyze and evaluate building forms. Various different textures will be gained to tessellate figures by mathematical transformations including translation, rotation, reflection and glide reflection on a surface. In the present study we will try to extend Escher's tessellation artworks into 3D for interior designing. The overall objective of the study is to emphasize how the use of interior design and different scientific disciplines could get a wealth to a place, how the situation activate the psychological perceptions and importance according to compliance with human-object-surrounding. For example, floor tiles could exactly be an Escher's tessellation artwork as in John August's Gecko Stone. An aplication of tessellation in interior designing is accepted as a decorative work. Tilings appear in all our surroundings, i.e., floor tiles, walls, ceilings, separators and even surfaces of equipment. Tiling is a very common way in general architecture. Escher's tessellation artworks are creative figures in the 2D plane. Tessellation is an arrangement of closed shapes that completely cover the plane without overlapping or leaving gaps.