| LIMES | Hues of green |
| COLOURING | The natural hues of one's eyes, hair and skin; the filling in of a shape or outline with crayons or felt-tip pens; food dye; or, pervading tone (9) |
| OLYMPICCOLORS | Hues of a famous five-ring logo? |
| REDWHITEANDBLUE | Hues of the day |
| AQUAS | Watery hues of blues |
| IRIDESCENT | Shifting hues of color (10) |
| SHADESOFYELLOW | Different hues of a primary colour (6,2,6) |
| HOUSEOFGOD | Church with good hues of activity (5,2,3) |
| WHITE | A colour that scatters all light and all hues of the visible spectrum, aka rainbow, yet is achromatic itself (5) |
| BLUE | Colour of a funk, shade of sadness, hue of the rude or lewd or a tint of a jazz standard by Thelonious Monk (4) |
| DRAB | Olive ___ (green hue of some military uniforms) |
| SHAMROCK | Green hue of the Irish flag |
| OER | "... the native hue of resolution / Is sicklied __ with the pale cast of thought": Hamlet |
| RUBY | The hue of Dorothy's magical slippers in the land of Oz |
| MAGENTA | Particular hue of male political worker, leader of agitators (7) |
| INDIGO | A hue of deep blue/violet, derived from a plant of the pea family; a deluxe hotel in Grosvenor Park Road, Chester (6) |
| ATOUCHOFTHESUN | Effect of exposure turning to such hue of tan? |
| STRAW | A peduncle of corn said to break a camel's back, be drawn in sortition or be clutched at by a drowning man; or, the golden-honey hue of said petiole (5) |
| LIME | From an Arabic word for citruses collectively, a lemon-like fruit with a zingy aroma; the chartreuse-green hue of its zest; a spotlight; a West Indian get-together; or, a tree with heart-shaped leaves |
| IRONGREY | The achromatic hue of freshly cut or broken "ferrum" or, a horse with a coat of this colour (4-4) |