| COLOURWAYS | Word for the schemes of hues or tints in which patterned clothes, fabrics or wallpapers are available (10) |
| TONES | Shades, hues or tints of colours; characters of sounds; musical notes or jingles of phones; or, recitative melodies in Gregorian chants (5) |
| HIGHLIGHTS | The best or most memorable parts of sporting or other events; blonde streaks or tints in the hair; or, bright or illuminated areas in images, paintings or pictures (10) |
| DENIMS | Work clothes fabrics |
| SINFUL | *Like the schemes of a fool, biblically speaking |
| STYMIE | Foil the schemes of |
| LYCRA | Sports clothes fabric |
| MOHAIR | Fine clothes fabric (6) |
| STRIDENT | Very loud red tint's in need of modification (8) |
| COLOUR | Studied in chromatics, general word for a pigment, hue or tint visible in a rainbow for example (6) |
| BOLTS | Word for crossbow arrows; stout pins or screws; sliding bars in locks; rolls of cloth, linen or wallpaper; white flashes of lightning; or, sprints, such as those executed by runner Usain (5) |
| CRANE | Illustrator of children's books and of William Morris' The Story of the Glittering Plain who also designed wallpapers including Peacock Garden and Meadow Flowers (5) |
| SWATCH | Small sample of carpet, cloth or wallpaper; a number of said testers bound as a book; a computer's palette of active colours; or, a spot of ink for matching during printing (6) |
| CITRINE | From Old French for "lemon-coloured", a variety of quartz in a hue or shade reminiscent of said fruit (7) |
| HUE | From Old English for "beauty, complexion, fine hair, skin", a word for appearance, aspect or form originally, later colour; or, its particular quality, shade or tint (3) |
| MAD | Insane, like the schemes cooked up by Cain Dingle and Charity Sharma in the Dales! (3) |
| PILOTS | I will be included in the schemes for those who take flight (6) |
| BOLT | A roll of fabric or wallpaper as a unit of measurement; the world's fastest man; or, a flash of lightning (4) |
| DUN | Related to "dark, dusk", word for a clay-bank, dingy, dull, greyish, mousey or muddy hue; or, a horse of this colour, typically with a black dorsal stripe, mane and points (3) |
| MASTERPLAN | In fellow's embrace - Daisy's place in the scheme of things |