| DENTELLE | From "little tooth", a word for lacework; or, ornamental tooling resembling lace edging, on a book (8) |
| RESEAU | From French for "net, web", a word for a fine mesh ground for lacework; or, a network of things, in particular spies or lines for reference in star photographs (6) |
| TRIDENT | From the Latin for "three tooth", a word for a three-pronged spear (7) |
| PEG | Word for a bolt of wood; a leg or a tooth; a key/screw for tuning a musical string; a cricket stump; a piton; a spillikin for scoring in cribbage; a coat hook; or, a turtle harpoon (3) |
| BEARD | Term used to refer to the hairy edging on a fall of certain irises (5) |
| KERB | Edging on a British sidewalk |
| LACIEST | Resembling lace |
| GRINDER | A coffee mill; a molar tooth; a swot; or, a dogged worker (7) |
| FILIGREE | One other girl getting in payment for lacework (8) |
| PICOT | A small embroidered loop used in a series to form an ornamental edging on ribbon or tatted lace (5) |
| POINTILLE | A pattern of tiny dots gauffered, punched or stippled with a fine burin in the art of armoury, bookbinding, gilding or gold tooling; or, the decorative technique used (9) |
| ESPALIERED | French description of a fruit tree or ornamental shrub with branches trained to grow flat against a garden wall (10) |
| ESPALIER | A framework on which fruit trees or ornamental shrubs are trained (8) |
| AGLETS | Meaning "small needles", tips for the ends of ribbons or shoelaces; or, ornamental pendants (6) |
| PLUME | A feather, especially one that is large or ornamental (5) |
| CADENZA | An improvised or ornamental passage played by a soloist (7) |
| SCALLOPS | Fanned mollusc shells emblematic of St James the Great and pilgrims; or, ornamental curves cut in the edges of cloth or worked in knitting in imitation of thus (8) |
| PURL | Ornamental lace edging |
| TAT | Make a knotted lace edging (3) |
| PICOTS | Small loops as edging on lace (6) |