| YARNBOMB | Graffiti with textiles |
| SINEW | Muscle in, disturbing work with textiles (5) |
| UPHOLSTERED | Covered (walls or furniture) with textiles (11) |
| EMPOLI | Italian town on the River Arno associated with textile manufacturing (6) |
| TABLELINEN | Bill, fellow with career in domestic textiles |
| KNIT | Make textiles with needles and wool (4) |
| UPHOLSTERY | Craft of covering furniture with padding and textiles |
| OMBRE | Trick-taking card game with a name derived from the Spanish for "man"; or, a dip-dye effect for hair or textiles (5) |
| NYLON | Synthetic polyamide fiber with tough, light weight elastic properties used in industry and for textiles |
| THISTLES | Depicted on some textiles designed by William Morris and with seeds eaten by goldfinches, prickly plants used as the botanical symbols of Scotland (8) |
| SILK | - Road; traversed by Marco Polo, an ancient caravan route connecting China with the Mediterranean which traded in textiles, gems, spices and tea (4) |
| SHETLAND | Archipelago with a native breed of pony whose economy relies on fishing, farming, oil, tourism and knitted textiles including Fair Isle (8) |
| LOOMS | Devices for weaving textiles with mechanised versions invented by Edmund Cartwright (5) |
| BROCADE | One of the textiles woven on a Jacquard loom other than damask or matelasse, often with gold or silver threads (7) |
| DYES | Used to colour textiles, wool and leather, substances with natural varieties derived from plants including madder, henna, indigo, woad and saffron (4) |
| WEAVER | Craftsperson who works with a loom to create textiles by means of interlacing warp and weft threads (6) |
| CROCHETER | Word for a handicrafter who creates decorative textiles and other pieces by means of interlocking loops of yarn with an elongated hook (9) |
| BATIK | Method of making coloured designs on textiles with wax to resist dye (5) |
| THECLOTHOFMAN | British isle's textiles? |
| TENTER | Framework for textiles |