| ROSENTHAL | Type of crystal |
| SPAR | Iceland -; type of crystal used by the Vikings to find the direction of the sun as an aid for navigation (4) |
| QUARTZ | Type of crystal (6) |
| WATERFORD | Type of crystal noted for its sparkle, first created in Ireland in 1783 (9) |
| LEAD | Element with the symbol Pb used to make some types of crystal glass (4) |
| BALL | A spherical mass of crystal, leather, minced beef, snow, wool, yarn etc; the delivery of the "cherry" in cricket; a plant's compact mass of roots with its surrounding soil; or, a formal assembly for d |
| SCRY | From an aphetic for "catch sight of", a verb meaning "divine by means of crystal-gazing"; or, a collective noun for a bunch, knob, lute, plump, skein, sord, sute or trip of wildfowls (4) |
| SNOWDOMES | One of the names of crystal ball-like toy globes that are shaken to activate blizzards or flurries of glitter around miniaturised winter landscapes; or, indoor ski slopes (9) |
| LUSTRE | The manner in which light interacts with a gem; a chandelier or vase ornamented with a number of crystal/glass pendants of the same name; or, a metallic pottery glaze (6) |
| SPICULE | A minute needle-like body of crystal, ice or coral/sponge skeleton; or, a jet of plasma ejected from the Sun's chromosphere (7) |
| SELHURST | ___ Park, home ground of Crystal Palace (8) |
| EAGLES | 'The ......', a nickname of Crystal Palace (6) |
| PICASSO | Practitioner of Crystal Cubism |
| TALC | Sample of crystal clear powder |
| ICE | Apprenticeship piece made out of crystal (3) |
| VIEIRA | Patrick __, manager of Crystal Palace (6) |
| NEWAGER | Practitioner of crystal healing, perhaps |
| SELHURSTPARK | Home ground of Crystal Palace FC |
| PAL | Friend of Crystal Palace (3) |
| WAGERS | Proponents of crystal healing |