| HENGIST | The sign of spun jute (7) |
| SCHAPPE | Fellow in special exhibition's opening has fabric of spun silk (7) |
| HESSIAN | Woven fabric from the skin of the jute plant also known as burlap (7) |
| HOPSACK | Coarse fabric of hemp and jute (7) |
| MATTING | General name for natural flooring of sea grass, jute, coir, sisal, rush... (7) |
| JUPITER | Rip jute to pieces on biggest planet (7) |
| BENGALI | Language that 'jute' is derived from |
| LINEN | Crease on the back of spun fabric |
| CANDYFLOSS | Light, fluffy confection of spun sugar (10) |
| DEARTH | Shortage of spun thread (6) |
| TORC | Necklace of spun carat gold breaks (4) |
| FOCUS | Concentrate of spun copper sulphate, primarily (5) |
| YARN | Here's a tale of spun thread (4) |
| THREAD | Cordonnet, cotton, crewel, embroidery silk, floss, purl, twist, yarn or other fine long strand of spun fibres; or, a continued idea or theme (6) |
| BASS | One of the words for a flax, hemp, jute or lime fibre bag for holding an angler's fish; a powerful sea perch with a brilliant silver body; or, from "low", the lowest part in music or the deepest male |
| STEW | Pack the first seam with fibres of jute (4) |
| HORSA | With Hengist, the two were leaders of the Jutes (5) |
| ROPE | Cord of coir,jute, hemp, sisal etc traditionally made in a long yard or walk where bikes may be used to get from one end to the other (4) |
| ANGLE | Member of a Germanic people who invaded Britain in the 5th and 6th centuries along with the Saxons and Jutes (5) |
| CANVAS | Heavy material of cotton, hemp or jute (6) |