| PRUNELLA | Cut lengths, taking a fabric |
| ANKLE | Shrank length taking in something over a foot (5) |
| ATTITUDES | Height, not length, taking time over special views (9) |
| ELL | A well-cut length of cloth? |
| PARALLEL | Cut length keeping everything aligned (8) |
| MUSLIN | Has to cut length in light cloth |
| DOCKYARD | Cut length, say, in part of Chatham once |
| COBBER | Digger's mate cut length from clothing |
| PLANK | Cut length of wood (5) |
| SLASH | Cut length in waistband (5) |
| SHAPE | A cookery mould for blancmange, jelly, pudding etc; a phantom; a geometric figure such as a circle, square or triangle; or, a fabric/paper piece, cut out in a particular form (5) |
| NACARAT | Word, thought to be referring to a colour of the shell of a mollusc that yields mother-of-pearl, for a shade of orangey-red or "sunset"; or, a fabric/linen dyed in such a hue (7) |
| BIAS | Diagonal line cut across the grain of a fabric; or, a weight added to one side of a lawn bowl (4) |
| COVERSLIP | Small glass plate placed over a specimen mounted on a microscope slide; or, a fabric case for a duvet (9) |
| WEAVE | Use a loom to make a fabric (5) |
| VELVET | A fabric with a thick, usually lustrous, pile (6) |
| WIGAN | "A wing" broken for a fabric ? (5) |
| MOIRE | A fabric, usually silk, having a rippled appearance (5) |
| SELVAGE | A woven edge of a fabric (7) |
| DENIM | As a fabric, dungaree was a predecessor of ___ |