| TIFFANYS | Luxury company with stained glass lamps, familiarly |
| TIFFANY | Designer whose jewellery, stained glass lamps and windows formed part of the Art Nouveau movement (7 |
| QUARTZ | Colourless glass lamp (6) |
| SLIGHT | Back of glass lamp is flimsy (6) |
| APSES | Recesses with stained glass windows |
| GIDDYPACED | Playwright's staggering jibe over reversed top with stained covering |
| INKY | Number of old Emile Zola volumes initialled, risky circling those with stained finger (4,5,6-4) |
| PARLEZVOUS | Number of old Emile Zola volumes initialled, risky circling those with stained finger (4,5,6-4) |
| PINKY | Number of old Emile Zola volumes initialled, risky circling those with stained finger (4,5,6-4) |
| TRANSEPT | Where there may be stained glass with varied patterns |
| CRAIGDARROCH | British Columbia... Castle in Victoria with beautiful stained glass windows |
| RONDELLE | Small glass disk used as an ornament in a stained-glass window |
| CHARTRES | French city with a cathedral renowned for its stained glass windows (8) |
| WINDOW | Frame with a plain pane or a panel of stained glass, such as any of those designed by Edward Burne-Jones or John Piper (6) |
| PIPER | Artist John Egerton Christmas who painted The Englishman's Home for the Festival of Britain, designed stained glass and collaborated with John Betjeman, Geoffrey Grigson and Ben Nicholson, among other |
| LEADS | A word for chief roles; frames holding the glass of stained-glass or lattice windows; lodes; millraces; principal news stories; sinkers; tethers for dogs; or, wires (5) |
| VITRAILLIST | From Latin for "glass", term for an artist or artisan skilled in the creation, design or use of stained glass (11) |
| APSE | Site for stained glass windows |
| LEADED | Like stained glass windows |
| SAINT | Figure depicted in stained glass |