| TREEN | Antiques, household objects and utensils made of wood collectively (5) |
| WILDLIFE | Animals and birds that live in the woods, collectively |
| FLATIRON | Antique household implement novice employed in tart |
| TINKER | An itinerant mender of kettles, pans and other household utensils made of metal; or, by extension, a word meaning to dabble or potter (6) |
| KNIFE | Utensil made of potassium, nickel and iron (5) |
| METALWARE | Utensils made of aluminium or steel, eg (9) |
| COLANDER | Kitchen utensil made of old nacre |
| ELUTE | Some steel utensils made to wash with solvent |
| RADAR | Radio detecting and ranging system of objects and determining its direction, distance, height or speed |
| JACKS | Game played with five metal or plastic objects and a small rubber ball (5) |
| USURP | We object and, united by sort of speech, take over (5) |
| COMET | Sky-high object - and '___ Flash', a cultivar of hemerocallis (5) |
| MINED | Picked up object and laid explosives |
| PEWTER | What alloy of tin and lead was popular for centuries for mugs, plates and utensils? (6) |
| DELIASMITH | Cook whose "effect" has dramatically increased sales of some foods and utensils |
| PANTRY | A small room or closet in which food, dishes, and utensils are kept |
| RAGEROOMS | Spaces where people pay to destroy household objects with sledgehammers |
| RAGEROOM | Where customers can pay to smash household objects to smithereens |
| DRAININGBOARD | Surface for wet dishes and utensils next to a sink |
| TEASPOONS | Utensils made using soapstone, possibly |