| COIR | Fibre of coconut husk (4) |
| HERL | Fibre of flax (4) |
| LINT | Fibre of local interest (4) |
| PITA | Fibre of Bromelia, Agave etc (4) |
| YARN | Thread or fibre (of a spun story) (4) |
| STEW | Pack top of ship with fibres of flax (4) |
| JUTE | The fibre of a tropical, yellow-flowered plant, used in making sacks and rope (4) |
| FLAX | Plant grown for the textile fibre of its stalks (4) |
| HEMO | The tough fibre of Cannabis sativa, used for making rope and coarse fabric (4) |
| SILK | Fibre of cocoons |
| NOIL | Short fibre of wool |
| PALM | Handy source of coconuts (4) |
| CARD | Toothed implement for raising the nap on cloth or disentangling the fibres of wool, hemp etc. before spinning (4) |
| HEMP | Plant native to Asia the fiber of which is made into ropes and strong fabrics |
| STRING | Word for a filing cord, hypothetical thread of matter, rope of pearls, strip of "silly" aerosol foam, tough fibre of a French bean, twanging wire of catgut or other line, filament, strand or twine (6) |
| SHELL | A structure such as a coconut's husk, a pea's pod, a pie's crust, a snail's exoskeleton or tortoise's carapace; or, a class that originally met in the apse of Westminster School (5) |
| COPRA | Dried coconut meat a source of coconut oil |
| SAMOA | Big exporter of coconut cream and coconut oil |
| MANILAHEMP | The fibre of the abaca plant (6,4) |
| PINACOLADA | Cocktail made with rum, cream of coconut and pineapple juice (4,6) |