| CARNABYSTREET | Place in central London, home to a lot of fashion or lifestyle retailers (7,6) |
| PICCADILLY | Street in central London, home to Fortnum & Mason since 1707 (10) |
| THEREFORE | So you dated, embracing a lot of fashion again |
| TRAFALGARSQUARE | Place in Central London |
| LOVELOCK | A long tress or braid of hair adorned by an Elizabethan or Jacobean "man of fashion"; or, as two words, a device attached to a bridge as a romantic gesture (8) |
| STORER | Anthony Morris ___, 1746-1799, English politician and man of fashion; or, one who stockpiles (6) |
| KNIGHTSBRIDGE | Residential and retail area of London, home to luxury department store Harrods (13) |
| LAMBETHPALACE | Hit stake hard, one in position in London home (7,6) |
| CLARENCEHOUSE | The London home of King Charles III and Queen Camilla (8,5) |
| SAMUELJOHNSON | Critic and lexicographer whose London home was in Gough Square (6,7) |
| NINE | Elms in a part of London - home to the New Covent Garden Market for fruits, vegetables and flowers! (4) |
| ALBERT | First name of Queen Victoria's husband after whom an area of London home to the V&A, Natural History Museum and an iconic concert hall is nicknamed (6) |
| ROLLINGINIT | Swagger home with a couple of drinks and holding on to a lot of bread? (7,2,2) |
| SYON | - House; London home of the Duke of Northumberland with interiors by Robert Adam, used as a location for Love in a Cold Climate, Gosford Park and The Wings of the Dove (4) |
| COSTARICA | Price a wealthy husband exchanged for a place in Central America (5,4) |
| ALIBI | The plea of being in another place in central Ibiza (5) |
| HARLEY | Street in London home to many medical offices |
| VITAL | It's a must to be opposed to a lot of Europeans (5) |
| TATE | London home to Picasso's "The Weeping Woman," with "The" |
| PANAMA | It goes to your head, that place in Central America (6) |