| EASEL | Support for a canvas |
| DECK | Word originally for a canvas cover for a ship, later used to denote the aforesaid vessel's floor (4) |
| SNEAKER | Rakes around the Northeast for a canvas shoe (7) |
| SAIL | A canvas of a ship; a voyage by boat; or, a wing of a hawk (4) |
| IMPASTO | Mastered by Rembrandt, a technique of applying oil paints thickly with a brush or a palette knife to achieve a surface texture in relief on a canvas or panel (7) |
| DODGER | A shirker; a shifty dishonest person or trickster; a canvas weather screen on a ship; or, with "Jammie", a shortcake sandwich biscuit (6) |
| NOSEBAG | A pouch for a picnicker's meal; a canvas haversack of fodder placed around a horse's muzzle so that said steed may feed from it; or, food, grub or sustenance generally (7) |
| OILPAINT | Cadmium yellow, rose madder, scarlet lake, viridian or other pigment suspended in a linseed- or poppy-based medium for mixing on a palette and applying to a canvas (3,5) |
| ESPADRILLE | A light shoe with a canvas upper, especially one with a braided cord sole |
| GESSO | Mixture of gypsum and glue applied to a canvas or wood panel as a ground for acrylic or oil paint (5) |
| GROUND | Terra firma; a canvas or panel to which paints are applied; a cricket field or rugby stadium; or, in plural, acreage or parkland surrounding a large house (6) |
| AWNING | A canvas canopy or sunshade sheltering a patio, ship's deck, shop window or tent door, for example (6) |
| GRAPESHOT | Ammunition for cannons consisting of a canvas tube containing a cluster of small iron or lead balls (9) |
| CHARLESTON | A canvas of a farmhouse in Sussex, where art bloomed, a walled garden originally burgeoned and the love and creativity of Duncan Grant, Vanessa Bell and their fellow bohemian Bloomsburyites once flour |
| PAINTING | Applying colour to a canvas with a brush (8) |
| INTENT | Determined to commit a crime, say, in a canvas shelter (6) |
| BREASTBAND | A canvas attached to a ship's rigging (10) |
| EMU | Bird whose eggs are sometimes a canvas for Aboriginal art |
| ZOOGRAPHY | The description, painting or study of animals and their habits when alone or in flocks or herds - a zoic art or ology that captures creatures' likeness on a canvas or in words (9) |
| BRUSHSERIF | Letter decoration on a canvas? |