| TWEEDS | Woven textiles such as those traditionally made in Harris (6) |
| ASH | The Ai ligature; an oleaceous tree bearing bunches of keys; cinders, such as those traditionally sprinkled on the first day of Lent; or, a pallid hue (3) |
| CRAFTS | Creative activities involving making things by hand, such as woven textiles, pottery, treen etc (6) |
| FABRICS | General word for woven textiles, sometimes sold in bolts (7) |
| COTTON | Natural fibre used to make textiles such as chambray, gingham, muslin, Liberty London's Tana Lawn or calico (6) |
| FABRIC | Textile such as candlewick, chambray, cotton, linen or ticking, sold or stored in rolls or "bolts" (6) |
| ERASER | No width in Harris tweed - there's bound to be a rub with that (6) |
| CALICO | Plain-woven textile |
| NAP | The raised pile on textiles such as velvet |
| LACE | Ornamental textile such as guipure or traditional Cluny woven with Leavers machines (4) |
| CHECK | Pattern of crossed lines forming squares for chessboards and textiles such as gingham or plaid (5) |
| MORDANT | An adhesive for gold leaf, or, a substance used to set dyes on textiles such as palampore (7) |
| NET | Textile such as tulle; the goal in football; or, a strip dividing a tennis or badminton court (3) |
| MATERIAL | Fabric or textile such as cambric, gingham, linen or seersucker (8) |
| TABBY | A textile such as silk or taffeta with a watered pattern; or, a cat with a brownish-greyish brindled coat (5) |
| ISLE | Found in sea in Harris, Lewis area (4) |
| TAPESTRY | Traditionally made at the Gobelins factory in Paris. a decorative woven textile for an arras, portiere or piece of furniture (8) |
| WENSLEYDALE | Cheese traditionally made in Hawes in Yorkshire, a favourite food of Nick Park's character Wallace (11) |
| LUNN | Sally -; with a recipe in Eliza Acton's The English Bread-Book and also Elizabeth David's English Bread and Yeast Cookery, a type of bun traditionally made in Bath (4) |
| SWEATER | Garment traditionally made in Guernsey, the Aran Islands or Fair Isle (7) |