A Quote by Diane von Furstenberg

Beauty is perfect in its imperfections, so you just have to go with the imperfections. — © Diane von Furstenberg
Beauty is perfect in its imperfections, so you just have to go with the imperfections.
We aren't supposed to strive for perfection everyday. If we were perfect, we'd have no need for Jesus. And it's through our imperfections that we really feel the pull toward our need for a Savior. So the imperfections serve a wonderful purpose if we'll let them.
The more seriously we work on our own imperfections, the less we are judgemental of the imperfections of others.
Occupy yourself in beholding and bewailing your own imperfections rather than contemplating the imperfections of others.
I am not perfect. I just think that imperfections are beautiful.
I don't want to be perfect, but I do want to be a role model. My mom always tells me that imperfections equal beauty. All of us are imperfect.
As long as human beings are imperfect, there will always be arguments for extending the power of government to deal with these imperfections. The only logical stopping place is totalitarianism -- unless we realize that tolerating imperfections is the price of freedom.
Just because you are happy it does not mean that the day is perfect but that you have looked beyond its imperfections
I know you aren't perfect. But it's a person's imperfections that make them perfect for someone else.
The one thing I loved so much about making 'Pitch Perfect 2' - especially in comparison to a movie like 'Ten Thousand Saints' - is you can go and be yourself, and you just know that all your weirdness and craziness and imperfections are completely embraced and accepted.
Being perfect is boring. It's the imperfections that make us perfect.
It is perfect to be imperfect, because perfection is made up of many imperfections put together that makes it perfect.
You can't be perfect, so enjoy your imperfections.
Imperfections make someone perfect to me.
The seed of your next artwork lies embedded in the imperfections of your current piece. Such imperfections are your guides - valuable, objective, non-judgmental guides to matters you need to reconsider or develop further.
Grace only sticks to our imperfections. Those who can’t accept their imperfections can’t accept grace either.
And then he says, "The writer must be true to truth." And that's a killer, because the only way you can describe a human being truly is by describing his imperfections. The perfect human being is uninteresting - the Buddha who leaves the world, you know. It is the imperfections of life that are lovable. And when the writer sends a dart of the true word, it hurts. But it goes with love. This is what Mann called "erotic irony," the love for that which you are killing with your cruel, analytical word.
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