| WROUGHTIRON | A pure form of a particular metal, often used for decorative work such as gates and furniture (7,4) |
| ISOTOPE | What is any of two or more forms of a particular chemical element (7) |
| IRONORE | From which a particular metal may be extracted (4,3) |
| DOUBLEBILL | Donate twice as much as Gates? |
| SHAKUDO | Japanese alloy of copper with a small (around 3%) amount of gold, traditionally used for decorative work on katana (longsword) fittings (7) |
| GETAGRIP | Calm down as gate undone with hairpin (3,1,4) |
| SANDARAC | Resin obtained from a tree of NW Africa whose hard dark wood is used for decorative work (8) |
| TIN | Metal, often used as a container |
| LEAD | Metal often used in bullets |
| TITANIUM | Strong, lightweight, corrosion-resistant metal often used to make bicycles |
| FETEGALANTE | Work such as Watteau’s seen surprisingly in teenage flat |
| SCENARIO | An outline or synopsis of the plot of a dramatic or literary work such as a film, novel or play; or, a postulated sequence of possible developments or events (8) |
| GOLD | A dense lustrous yellow precious metal durable to the point of virtual indestructibility, highly malleable, and usually found in nature in a comparatively pure form. This mineral is also a chemical el |
| DIAMOND | Name a nearly pure form of carbon, valued as a precious stone (7) |
| COPPER | Metal often forming a patina of verdigris as a result of weathering (6) |
| MOVEMENT | A division of a longer musical work, such as a symphony (8) |
| CATHOLICON | From "universal", a word for a cure-all, elixir or panacea; or, a comprehensive work, such as an encyclopaedic dictionary or the early Summa Grammaticalis (10) |
| PENCIL | What rod-like instrument became common after a very pure form of graphite was discovered in Cumberland, England? (6) |
| PEG | Cylindrical pin or bolt of wood or metal often tapered at one end used for holding two things together |
| IRON | A metal, often black in color, that rusts, is attracted by magnets, and is used in making steel. |