| MICHAELMASDAISY | North American flower of varying colours, also known as aster (10,5) |
| ETONBLUE | Colour, also known as shelduck (4,4) |
| PLATE | South American flower of unusual petal design |
| YUKON | North American flower that's disgusting being worn (5) |
| VIOLET | North American flower commonly blue or purple in colour |
| HUNDREDS | ____ and thousands, tiny sugar beads of varying colours used for decorating cakes (8) |
| MEDLEYS | Fights or scuffles originally, later miscellanies or mixtures; musical potpourris; textiles woven from yarns of varying colours; or, races involving multiple swimming styles (7) |
| CHAMELEON | Each lemon may be one of varying colour |
| TIEDYE | Produce varying colours in a piece of clothing (3-3) |
| TEAL | Blue-green colour; also a type of duck (4) |
| COTINUS | Genus of trees and shrubs with vivid autumn colour, also called smoke tree (7) |
| BRIGHT | Word for a bold or vivid colour, also used to mean cheerful, clever, full of light, promising or sunny (6) |
| IDOCRASE | Gemstone mineral of the silicate type typically yellow, green or brown in colour; also called vesuvianite (8) |
| PINK | Pale red colour; also a carnation (4) |
| CROCUS | Reptile on top of American flower (6) |
| RIOGRANDE | American flower in Rhode Island, giant swallows also (3,6) |
| ORECCHIETTE | Pasta in the form of small curved discs of varying thickness, originating in the Apulia region of southern Italy; 'little ears' (11) |
| STEAK | A cut of beef, of varying quality (5) |
| JADE | A hard ornamental stone of varying shades of green and white (4) |
| DUCAT | Former European gold coin of varying values named from Latin, 'of a duchy' (5) |