| SHOPPE | A fanciful or deliberately twee spelling of an emporium or business with spurious ye olde- fashioned quaintness or charm (6) |
| CUSTOM | Regular trade or business with a shop etc. (6) |
| SMIT | Singing an olde-fashioned love song? |
| SHOP | A bazaar, boutique or emporium; or, a spell of emption one is said to do until they figuratively drop (4) |
| STOREY | Floor of an emporium with early closing (6) |
| REVERIE | From "be delirious, dream, rave", a word for a fanciful or visionary notion; an oneiric state of being pleasantly lost in one's thoughts; or, a piece of music evoking a dreamy atmosphere (7) |
| NARCISSUS | Beautiful fellow with spurious graciousness - awful ego coming out! |
| PLACEBO | Misplace bottle filled with spurious medication (7) |
| PIPE | --- dream, a fanciful or impossible plan or hope (4) |
| CLOUDCUCKOOLAND | A fanciful or ideal realm (5-6-4) |
| PTISAN | A medicinal decoction of barley water; or, an alternative spelling of an apozem, herbal tea or infusion (6) |
| LOOT | Word for stolen goods that's the backwards spelling of an object such as a hammer or a screwdriver |
| MACARONI | Tubes of pasta; a dandy, exquisite or fop who exaggeratedly imitated continental fashions; something extravagant or fanciful; or, a medley (8) |
| LALA | Similar to the name of a yellow being with an "Eh-oh!"-waving hand, a word used to denote a fanciful state or a dreamland (2-2) |
| LIBERTY | Draper's son who founded an emporium synonymous with a style of Art Nouveau that is also noted for its iconic art print fabrics (7) |
| DELI | Short word for an emporium selling dainties or special culinary luxuries by way of exotic, fine, imported, prepared or unusual charcuterie, cheese, chocolates and the like (4) |
| GANESH | One of the spellings of an elephant- headed mouse-riding Hindu god of wisdom, success and prophecy (6) |
| ASANTE | One of the spellings of an empire and region in modern-day Ghana that was annexed by Britain in 1902 |
| BIBELOTS | From a fanciful French formation based on "beautiful", a word for knick-knacks or curious trinkets; or, miniature books (8) |
| FAZOOL | Pasta __ (jokey spelling of an Italian bean dish) |