| CORD | A ribbed fabric; or, a dressing-gown belt (4) |
| BIAS | Prejudice; diagonal line or cut across the grain of a fabric; or, a bulge or weight on the side of a bowl (4) |
| ROBE | Another word for a dressing gown; or, a flowing garment worn with a cap for a graduation (4) |
| LACE | A delicate filigree-like fabric; or, a fine cord or ribbon, such as St Audrey's tawdry necklet, synonymous with cheap, gaudy or vulgar finery (4) |
| FULL | Word describing the moon when completely illuminated, wine/cheese with much body/flavour, a skirt cut with ample fabric or a rich colour (4) |
| PURL | Knitting stitch that is the reverse of a plain stitch, used to produce a ribbed texture (4) |
| ATWILL | As one sees in fit in a ribbed fabric (2,4) |
| CORDS | Pants made of a ribbed fabric |
| TWILL | A ribbed fabric |
| PEEKABOO | A child's game of hiding and suddenly reappearing; a description of a garment with revealing openwork or sheer fabric; or, a coif where a fringe conceals one eye (8) |
| REPP | Ribbed fabric |
| REPS | Ribbed fabrics |
| BATHROBE | A dressing gown made from towelling or a similar fabric (8) |
| HOLMES | A dressing-gown-wearing, honey bee-farming, pipe-smoking, consulting detective, literary master of abductive reasoning and eccentric scraper of a violin, whose fellow Watson is a doctor of medicine (6 |
| FLANNEL | Woollen fabric; or, a facecloth (7) |
| PEIGNOIR | Word for a dressing-gown or negligee that derives from the French for "to comb", since it was originally worn while combing the hair (8) |
| WRAPPER | Listen to pop singer in a dressing-gown |
| KIMONO | Novel about love in a dressing-gown |
| WARDROBE | A dressing-gown in hospital and somewhere to keep it? |
| BATHROBEBAE | Hottie in a dressing gown? |