| FRACTAL | Infinitely recursive figure such as the Koch snowflake |
| CARAVAGGIO | Artist born Michelangelo Merisi noted for still lifes of flowers and fruit, half-length figures such as The Boy Bitten by a Lizard and Bacchus and for decorating the Contarelli Chapel (10) |
| DECAHEDRON | Solid figure such as a cube (10) |
| HOURGLASS | Girl after remodelling rough figure such as this (9) |
| PRIMENUMBER | Figure such as 41, 43 or 47 |
| CHEF | Culinary figure such as Kwame Onwuachi |
| SPIN | ___ doctor, political figure such as Alastair Campbell (4) |
| ANTISANTA | Evil Christmas figure such as Krampus |
| ELF | Fantasy figure such as Legolas |
| SHAPE | General name for a geometric figure such as a dodecagon, parallelogram or a tetrahedron (5) |
| ORDINARY | Simple figure such as a cross charged upon a shield's field (8) |
| OXYMORON | From "pointedly foolish", a figure, such as "deafening silence", in which contradictory terms are conjoined (8) |
| SHAPES | Geometric figures such as crescents, diamonds, kites or pyramids; paper cut-outs; or cookery moulds for blancmange, jelly and other such puddings (6) |
| OBLONGS | Old boys harbouring desire for figures such as these? (7) |
| NORSE | Mythology containing figures such as Thor and Freyja (5) |
| EGGTIMERS | Those with hourglass figures such as gets German mister in a ferment (3,6) |
| LACE | Delicate ornamental fabric such as the first true form punto in aria (literally "stitches in the air"), or its snowflake-patterned forerunner reticella (4) |
| CRYSTAL | From the Greek for "ice, frost", an array of atoms forming a polyhedral solid, such as a diamond, moonstone, piece of rock salt or a snowflake (7) |
| ALBINO | Like the gorilla Snowflake, once at the Barcelona Zoo |
| REPETEND | In mathematics, the infinitely repeated figure(s) in a recurring decimal fraction (8) |