| ROBE | Garment with a sash |
| CAFTAN | A long-sleeved garment, reaching to the ankles and often tied with a sash, worn in the Middle East (6) |
| KIMONO | A loose robe with wide sleeves, fastened with a sash, worn in Japan (6) |
| TIARA | Item often worn with a sash |
| CASEMENT | Window frame with a sash initially set in concrete (8) |
| OBI | The redbreast neither started nor ended with a sash (3) |
| SLIDER | A luger; a mini burger; a mule; a sash window; a skidder; a slithering skink; a terrapin that uses a rock as a glide; or, a tricky ice-cream sandwich (6) |
| MOUSE | Long-tailed rodent known collectively as a mischief; old word for a match for firing a cannon or blasting a mine; or, a weight used when replacing a sash cord (5) |
| BELT | A girdle; a sash worn by a dan as a symbol of attainment in judo or karate; or, a region of asteroids (4) |
| NETSUKE | A small, carved toggle, often of ivory or wood, used as a fastener to a sash on a kimono (7) |
| BATWING | A sleeve of a garment with a deep armhole and a tight wrist (7) |
| SCARF | Word for a sling or a sash first, later a boa, cravat, muffler, stole or other length/square of fabric for the neck (5) |
| DARN | To mend a hole in a garment with a series of crossing or interwoven stitches (4) |
| UNZIPPED | Loosened (a garment) with a metal fastener |
| RAIL | Horizontal piece in a sash window; family of birds in which the coot, moorhen and corncrake belong; or, in the plural, a racecourse barrier (4) |
| BALDRIC | Belt for a sword worn like a sash (7) |
| PANE | It might be surrounded by a sash |
| MISS | Word on a sash |
| WAIST | Place for a sash |
| WINDOW | Surrounded by a sash |