| FILET | A net or lace with a simple pattern on a square mesh background |
| EMBROIDERY | Form of stitched art used to create broderie anglaise, samplers, crewelwork or simple patterns on aida cloth (10) |
| CUTWORK | Elegant textile artistry in the form of applique, broderie anglaise, embroidery or lace with an ornamental pattern of excised portions, eyelets or picots (7) |
| TRAWL | Word meaning to fish with a net or to thoroughly search/fish the Net (5) |
| TAT | Make lace, with a bit of an adaptation (3) |
| CASKALE | Ask to make lace with a draught beer (4,3) |
| GUIPURE | Originally with silk-whipped or wrapped threads, pretty lace with floral motifs linked by bars, brides or bridges, rather than a net (7) |
| AGUN | James "Can't catch love with a net or ___" |
| RUCHE | A strip or pleated or frilled lawn or lace |
| ELUDE | Sharing its root "to play" with a simple parlour game, a word meaning to baffle; or, to escape by cunning (5) |
| ARCADIAN | Of a Greek district with a simple lifestyle (8) |
| HEATHROBINSON | Complicated design with a simple purpose for Crusoe on the moors (5,8) |
| ANGLEPOISELAMP | It illuminates fish on river with a simple arrangement (10,4) |
| PICOT | Any of a series of small ornamental loops forming an edging on ribbon or lace (5) |
| ENMESH | To tangle in a net or snare (6) |
| MESH | The space between threads in a net; or, the way two lives can work in conjunction when they are well met (4) |
| HERM | A head or bust on a square base (4) |
| ANGELIC | Lace with gin in a way that's divine! (7) |
| SPUN | Made yarn with a simple play on words |
| DOILY | Name of an old woollen material introduced by a 17th-century London draper that later transferred to an ornamental mat of lace or lace-like paper (5) |