| JERKIN | Waistcoat-like leather garment worn over a doublet in the 1600s (6) |
| PLACCAT | Old doublet in home nibbled at edge by pet? |
| DEERSKIN | Daughter with ease, as we hear collected money with people for a leather garment (8) |
| SEALSKIN | Stops family getting a leather garment (8) |
| TABARD | Garment worn over a knight's armour (6) |
| ATTEST | Affirm that a doublet was found in a different seat |
| DIPOLE | Directional radio or television aerial consisting of two metal rods with a connecting wire fixed between them, also known as a doublet (6) |
| COLONY | Virginia, in the 1600s |
| NOGGIN | Word, dating from the 1600s, for a small mug or wooden cup; its contents of around one gill; a drink of beer/spirits; or, alluding to said mug, one's bean, bonce, conk or head (6) |
| AGLETS | From French for "small needles", metal tags or tips on the ends of cords for doublets/hose, ribbons, shoelaces, shoulder braids etc; or, in the singular with "babies", little images cut into these (6) |
| DOUBTS | Have second thoughts about the French leaving doublets (6) |
| DOUBLE | Twice remove end of doublet (6) |
| PETTICOAT | From a phrase roughly meaning "small jacket", word for a man's tight-fitting upper garment worn beneath a doublet originally, later for a woman's frilly underskirt (9) |
| TANKTOP | Sleeveless close-fitting garment worn over a shirt or blouse, popular in the 1970s (4,3) |
| HOSE | Formerly, a man's garment covering the legs, worn with a doublet (4) |
| COUPLE | Doublet |
| WAISTCOAT | Garment worn over a shirt and under a jacket (9) |
| DEMERARA | Large-grained brown cane sugar first produced in Guyana in the 1600s (8) |
| TULIP | Flower that caused a mania in the 1600s |
| JAVA | Island on which the Dutch introduced coffee in the 1600s |