Wednesday, 17 August 2022

Perfect is the enemy of Good

 The saying "Perfect is the enemy of Good" is something that comes into play with my quilting.  

I took a moment to look up the origin of that saying, which is attributed to Voltaire.  I've also found references like, Robert Watson-Watt talking about a "cult of the imperfect", in which he stated, "Give them the third best to go on with; the second best comes too late, the best never comes".  Even Shakespeare had a thought on this, with King Lear's Duke of Albany, warns of "striving to better, oft we mar what's well" and in Sonnet 103:

Were it not sinful then, striving to mend,

To mar the subject that before was well?

This weekend, I was in a virtual Sew-Day with the Quilt Guild I am a member of and I realized I was sitting there agonizing over a border for a mystery quilt that did not have perfect points.  Should I rip it all apart?  Would I be any better off if I did?  How much time would that consume?  I decided to ask for a little perspective from my quilting family.  



It was they who said that unless I was seeking a competition-level quilt, leave the borders and send the quilt on its way to be quilted.  Take the lessons I learned from piecing it together and recall the memories of working through the clues and change it from an object of frustration to a piece of imperfect art that someone in my life would thoroughly appreciate.

What do you think? PS - this was also my triad colour quilt - Green, Orange and Purple.  Using a triad is supposed to allow the quilt to look extra vibrant. 


I give this one piece of advice freely - if in doubt, seek a second opinion from your quilting family!

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