Do you look at your quilt an see every little thing!
#51
Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Schenectady, NY
Posts: 37
Amish quilters always make at least one mistake in their quilts on purpose because they believe that only God is perfect!
I have a good friend who is also a quilter. Many times we will show each other our finished product and ask the other if she can find the mistake (s). We are very honest with each other and 99% of the time we cannot find each others mistakes until they are pointed out.
I have learned to be less critical of the things I make- "finished IS better that perfect!" Sooo, go easy on yourself and keep on quilting.
I have a good friend who is also a quilter. Many times we will show each other our finished product and ask the other if she can find the mistake (s). We are very honest with each other and 99% of the time we cannot find each others mistakes until they are pointed out.
I have learned to be less critical of the things I make- "finished IS better that perfect!" Sooo, go easy on yourself and keep on quilting.
#54
By no means are you the only one. I just wonder where we all got the idea that everything we do has to be perfect?
Someone told me along time ago that the Amish quilters deliberately make a mistake in every quilt because only God is perfect.
One other friend who had won best of show the previous year (1995 or 1996) at the big Houston Festival had the "galloping horse" theory. If you pass by with the quilt on a galloping horse, and no one spots the error, it does not count.
Lucille
Someone told me along time ago that the Amish quilters deliberately make a mistake in every quilt because only God is perfect.
One other friend who had won best of show the previous year (1995 or 1996) at the big Houston Festival had the "galloping horse" theory. If you pass by with the quilt on a galloping horse, and no one spots the error, it does not count.
Lucille
#55
Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 4
Connie, so many times I've heard "Oh, you're too much of
a perfectionist, that's good enough!" I respond to them "If you needed brain surgery would you want a perfectionist or a doctor who said, "Oh, that's good enough." We,quilters are just trying to do our best, right?
a perfectionist, that's good enough!" I respond to them "If you needed brain surgery would you want a perfectionist or a doctor who said, "Oh, that's good enough." We,quilters are just trying to do our best, right?
#58
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 851
I have been like that in the past about things. But when I took up quilting a couple of years ago, I promised myself to quilt with a joyful eye rather than a critical one. I think about how much I love this new found hobby and avoid thinking about its imperfections. I do this for no one but myself, even though others benefit from my efforts. All the better if they do. When I make a quilt for someone, I think about them and the love I feel for them. Maybe it sounds corny, but it works for me. I don't know when I've gone after a hobby with such joyful abandon.
#60
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Bluebell
Posts: 4,291
I am not a perfectionist, wish I was sometimes, but I am particular. There is a diffrence right? Anyhoo, I decided that I love my quilts flaws and all and anyone who gets them will love them also. If they are perfect, people are afraid to use them, I want mine worn out and loved! A few months ago, I gave a lap quilt dnp to a dear friend for her birthday, a few weeks later I asked to borrow it to show our quilting group, as they wanted to see a dnp, she said "but I use it each night to curl up with" so I got to borrow and and took it right back so she can curl up with it. That quilt I know is loved :)
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