| OFFFORM | Describing indifferent quality of folios or manuscripts, initially (3,4) |
| SHEETS | Trays upon which to bake biscuits; sails; panes of stamps; folios; or, wide expanses of ice, clouds or rain (6) |
| VERSO | From "turned leaf", the back of a folio or sheet; a left-hand page of an open book; or, the rear of something, such as a coin, medal or painting (5) |
| FACTORY | Place for production of Folio in the style of luvvies? |
| SANGFROID | Celebrated folio or revolutionary papers being collected |
| PROSTHESIS | False part of folio omitted from professor's academic writing (10) |
| OFT | Back of folio paper frequently used by poets |
| PLASMA | Short drama from uplifting manuscript initially adapted for television (6) |
| IDIOM | Language is described in old manuscript initially (5) |
| BEAM | Ray Bradbury edited awful manuscript, initially (4) |
| INSIPID | All but imprisoned after importing one piano of indifferent quality (7) |
| OAKLEAF | Any one of the Quercus folios symbolising the National Trust or forming a cluster on a US military decoration; or, a lettuce with serrated edges, like said foliage (3-4) |
| FOOLISH | Folios produced by second Theatre of the Absurd (7) |
| TRAFFIC | Extremely distressing having to take folios for good trade |
| INAHUFF | One prophet failing to finish folios, sulking |
| HIVEOFF | Transfer hot writer's old folios (4,3) |
| RUMPFED | Folio's replacement for line in wrinkly hag's description of ronyon |
| NUMBERS | Folios |
| HERBERT | Philip ---, 4th Earl of Pembroke, one of the 'incomparable pair of brethren' to whom Shakespeare's First Folio was dedicated (7) |
| VIGNETTES | Foliage ornaments in books, carvings or manuscripts; illustrations fading into borderless backgrounds; or, head/tailpieces on title pages or at the beginning of chapters (9) |