| SLIPON | Garment or shoe easily or quickly put on or off (4-2) |
| SLIPPER | A comfortable shoe easily put on and usually worn indoors (7) |
| TRIEDON | Put on a garment or shoes to test if they fit (5,2) |
| POPEYE | Sailor quickly put on watch |
| ADVERB | Often it's buy, call or save, slowly or quickly for example (6) |
| ISOBAR | Where pressure is put on - or bias, in a way (6) |
| SUITOR | To be put on or added to by a would-be wooer (6) |
| INTAKE | An amount of alcohol, calories, food or oxygen consumed or respired; a cheat; a decrease by knitting/purling two stitches together; a mine airway; or, a narrowing of a garment or a pipe (6) |
| SELECT | Choose whether top is on or off (6) |
| EXEUNT | Which stage direction indicates that named actors go on or off stage (6) |
| LINING | Inner fabric layer of a curtain or a garment; or, brown paper or mull for strengthening a book's back/spine (6) |
| EDGING | A border on a garment or along a garden path, lawn etc; or, the passementerie, pebbles, sleepers, stones, for example, thus used (6) |
| PRESTO | Quickly put last of butter in sauce (6) |
| SCREAM | Loud cry "leave quickly" - put energy into it |
| LAPPET | Small lap on a garment or headdress (6) |
| TOGGLE | On-or-off switch |
| SWITCH | It's either on or off? (6) |
| SKIING | Activity partaken on- or off-piste (6) |
| SEQUIN | Word originally for a Venetian gold coin, later a spangle- or paillette-like flat shiny foil bead for embellishing a garment or a costume (6) |
| COLLAR | From the Latin for "neck", a bertha, chevesaile, jampot, piccadilly or other band attached to the nape of a garment or worn separately (6) |