| SHAPING | Working with a lathe, say |
| SPINDLE | A turntable's central rod for holding a record; a spike used with a distaff for hand-spinning yarn; or, a baluster, chair leg or other piece of wood turned with a lathe (7) |
| THROW | Word used to mean cast/roll dice, form pottery on a wheel, give a party, lob a ball, lose a horseshoe, turn with a lathe or twist yarn together (5) |
| TURNS | Shapes with a lathe |
| TURNERY | Art, craft or skill of hand-making items from wood with a lathe or the workshop where the artisan practises (7) |
| MANDREL | A spindle in a lathe to which a workpiece is fixed while being turned; a jeweller's tapering triblet on which rings are shaped or sized; or, a miner's pick (7) |
| TURN | A spin, whether of a lathe, a potter's wheel or a Scot performing a reel (4) |
| CHUCK | A device that holds a workpiece in a lathe or tool in a drill (5) |
| ARBOR | Latin word for a tree, used in scientific contexts to refer to a trunk-like axle, beam, mandrel, shaft or spindle in a machine or a lathe (5) |
| SADDLE | An equestrian settle to which a col, a cut of hare/lamb/mutton, an earthworm's clitellum, a fowl's back, a lathe's carriage and many other seat-like things are likened (6) |
| FEED | An amount of provender for cattle or of sustenance for a baby; a plentiful meal; the rate of progress of a lathe; or, an actor's stooge (4) |
| TURNING | Word for a bend, crossroads, curve or junction; the shaping of a vase or other crock in pottery; or, the action or skill of using a lathe (7) |
| TURNER | Artist working on a lathe (6) |
| TURRET | Part of a lathe for making a tank-top (6) |
| HATEMAIL | I'm turning a lathe to deal with hostile letters (4,4) |
| KNURLED | Having a crossed-line pattern generally applied by a lathe to aid gripping (7) |
| MINSK | Where Lee Harvey Oswald was a lathe operator |
| WOODWORKER | one using a lathe |
| CHUCKS | Devices for things in a lathe (6) |
| SHAPEBADLY | Show little promise as a lathe worker (5,5) |