| STAMPEDED | Rushed to print by two editors |
| EMENDED | Workers, flanked by two editors, made changes (7) |
| EDIFIED | Two editors to retain provided one's improved mind (7) |
| NEEDED | Required any speech to have two editors (6) |
| PUDDLE | Disturbance made by an oar blade pulled through water; an excess of curtain hem spilling onto a floor; or, a woodcut print by M. C. Escher (6) |
| ETONMESS | English summer dessert thought to have been first mentioned in print by Arthur Beavan in 1896 (4,4) |
| GROUSE | Bird whose verb meaning, to complain, was apparently first used in print by Rudyard Kipling |
| OWLOFTHESEA | 1977 stonecut print by Inuit artist Kenojuak Ashevak: 4 wds. |
| RABBITEATINGSEAWEED | Nature print by famed Inuk artist Kenojuak Ashevak: 3 wds. |
| HEEDED | Didn't ignore that man with two editors (6) |
| DEDUCE | Conclude that two editors you see are short-listed |
| CEDED | A hundred and two editors gave way (5) |
| ENLARGER | Seen in dark room: size of print by unusual glare. Right? (8) |
| WAVE | The Great ___ off Kanagawa, a woodblock print by the Japanese Ukiyo-e artist Hokusai |
| MIXEDMEDIA | Maxim I reproduced involving two editors using various arts (5-5) |
| PORTICOED | Right jerk interrupts number two editor with columns (9) |
| 36VIEWSOFMOUNTFUJI | *Series of nearly 40 Woodblock prints by Hokusai depicting a Japanese peak |
| POCHOIR | French word for "stencil", thus a term for a highly refined painterly method of making multicoloured prints by means of stencilling (7) |
| TYPESETTING | Putting to print, but sent it to Egypt, alas (11) |
| NEWSWORTHY | "fit to print," to reporters |