| MARASCHINO | Blemishes covering a material for liqueur |
| CHEESECLOTH | A loose-woven gauzelike cotton fabric used as a material for making shirts and blouses in the 1960s and 1970s |
| FELT | Touched the texture of a material for making hats (4) |
| CANVAS | Clubs with vans designed to carry a material for sails (6) |
| RATAFIA | Holding a fine one, a sailor's up for liqueur |
| CURACAO | Posh artist in cricket club with a love for liqueur |
| ABSINTHE | A receptacle holding small article for liqueur (8) |
| ELDERFLOWER | Cockney retained her provision for baking a and something for liqueurs? (11) |
| BENEDICTINE | Be one over the eight, guzzling order for liqueur |
| CHERRYBRANDY | Weep about woman's class with yen for liqueur |
| TRIPLESEC | Lets price be adjusted for liqueur (6,3) |
| ANISETTE | I sent tea in exchange for liqueur (8) |
| TIAMARIA | One inside thanks girl for liqueur (3,5) |
| PONY | Small glass for liqueur |
| LIMONCELLO | Luxury car with new instrument for liqueur (10) |
| WOOD | Sylvan glade smaller than a forest with a collection of trees; or, a material used for parquetry, treenware or xylographs by Lucas Cranach the Elder, for example (4) |
| STRAIN | Breed or stock; a trait; a melody; deformation of a material from stress in physics; an intense effort; or, a sprain incurred as a result of said wrench (6) |
| GLASS | Vessel such as a tumbler, flute or schooner; or, a material used for the coloured pieces inside a kaleidoscope (5) |
| YIELDSTRENGTH | Stress level required for a specified deformation in a material |
| IDOL | A material object, especially a carved image, that is worshipped as a god (4) |