| DUFFEL | Heavy woollen cloth with a thick nap named after a town in Antwerp, Belgium |
| MECHELEN | City in Antwerp, Belgium, housing St Rumbold's Cathedral (8) |
| FRIEZE | A type of medieval Irish or Welsh coarse woollen cloth with a nap; a member of entablature between the architrave and cornice; or, any ornamental band or strip on a wall (6) |
| PONCHO | Cloak made of a piece of woollen cloth with a hole in the middle for the head originally worn in South America (6) |
| BRECHT | Town in the province of Antwerp, Belgium with a Trappist abbey |
| SHEPHERDSTARTAN | Woollen cloth with a black-and-white check (9,6) |
| PLAID | Twilled woollen cloth with a crossbarred pattern, worn over the shoulder as part of Highland dress (5) |
| PETERSHAM | Heavy woollen overcoat named after a 19th century English officer (9) |
| MELTON | Heavy woollen cloth used for outerwear (6) |
| ORPINGTON | A heavy breed of domestic fowl named after a town in Kent (9) |
| TILSIT | A cheese first made in, and named after, a town in East Prussia |
| DORKING | A heavy breed of domestic fowl named after a town in Surrey (7) |
| HOBOKEN | District of Antwerp, Belgium, on the River Scheldt associated with the shipbuilding industry (7) |
| LANDAU | Four-wheeled horsedrawn carriage with two folding hoods named after a town in Bavaria (6) |
| APHRABEHN | English dramatist thought to have been employed by Charles II as a spy in Antwerp |
| PASTA | In Antwerp, a starter could be ravioli or rigatoni (5) |
| DUMDUM | Soft-nosed bullet that expands on impact named after a town in eastern India (6) |
| AYLESBURYDUCK | Breed of bird named after a town in Buckinghamshire (9,4) |
| NEUFCHATEL | Soft creamy cheese named after a town in northern France (10) |
| AXMINSTER | Type of patterned carpet named after a town in East Devon (9) |