
If perfectionism implies not taking chances, then it's not worthwhile.
I don't think it does. In my understanding, it implies being true to some self-imposed standard, irrespective of anyone else.
A perfect circle is nice, but uninspired. My self-imposed standard is different, I guess.
A perfect circle is nice, but uninspired. My self-imposed standard is different, I guess.

I aim for imperfect. It is human.
If I may, I believe the original question is somehow ill-posed. I bet nobody would be able to define perfection in any artistic endeavour, or at least not in any meaningful/useful/universal way.
If by "perfectionism" we mean the quest for perfect adherence to a specific set of technical standards, often self-imposed and almost impossible to achieve in full by definition, then we can easily find hordes of such photography practitioners. They have tried a sizeable fraction of the combinatorially infinite number of possible juxtapositions of camera, lens, filter, film, film developer, fixer, washing technique, enlarger (and enlarger lenses), paper and paper developer, washing and drying schedule. Yet, they seldom produce any image with a "wow" factor, at all. And even if they did, they would probably not even notice, as their mind is already pondering about the next combination of camera, lens, filter, film, developer to be tried.
There are other photographers who are obsessed with the precise way their pictures represent the message they want to convey through them. They often produce many images that are widely considered "memorable", albeit the same pictures would raise many a eyebrows among the technical-perfectionists above, and they are often so busy with the next thing they want to say with an image to become unable to enjoy their achievements for a brief moment.
Then there are photographers to whom the sheer pleasure of taking a tangible record of a single, infinitesimal moment in time is enough satisfaction to keep going and expose the next roll, many more rolls, in an insatiable down-hill run to record more moments, all the moments, and possibly, at least once in a lifetime, "the perfect moment", provided that it existed, ever.
As any other human endeavour, photography is a dialogue about a large number of potentially contradictory views of reality and perception.
All the photographers are aiming towards some ideal of perfection, being it technical, linguistic, artistic, or any combination of the above. Just, no two photographers would ever agree on which such ideal should be. Otherwise, photography would be massively boring, there would be no reason to share our work with others, and there would be no need for a place like Photrio, at all...
OneEyedPainter
I bet nobody would be able to define perfection in any artistic endeavour, or at least not in any meaningful/useful/universal way.
It's an attempt to make the reality equal the ideal.
Perhaps "perfectionism" is an obsessive form of personal research for a specific match to a specific ideal, but we should aknowledge that the perfection sought by different people will unavoidably be of different kinds and flavours.
Perfectionism is one of the characteristics of the Procrastinator.
Welcome to Photrio @Eishwaneeren !
Please define 'perfection'? I think there are plenty of examples that qualify. How many tries did Weston do to get the perfect pepper? How much time did Adams spend on perfecting the Zone System to get as close as possible to his artistic vision? How strict were Cartier-Bresson's philosophy and discipline in nailing the 'decisive moment'?
I think in photography, and especially amateur photography, it's relatively easy to find perfectionists. Whether they actually yield perfect results - probably not by their own definition, as that would be antithetical to being a perfectionist!
.“Le mieux est l’ennemi du bien.”
Voltaire.
@Eishwaneeren If you say "I suffer from perfectionism" then you have identified the fact that your work suffers because your expectations are hampering your creativity. Perhaps it's time to consider loosening your definition of what makes for good output.

Maybe product photography. Getting exactly the perfect photo of the glistening, steaming hamburger.
Perfection is for idealists and the otherwise naive.
They have tried a sizeable fraction of the combinatorially infinite number of possible juxtapositions of camera, lens, filter, film, film developer, fixer, washing technique, enlarger (and enlarger lenses), paper and paper developer, washing and drying schedule. Yet, they seldom produce any image with a "wow" factor, at all. And even if they did, they would probably not even notice, as their mind is already pondering about the next combination of camera, lens, filter, film, developer to be tried.
There are other photographers who are obsessed with the precise way their pictures represent the message they want to convey through them. They often produce many images that are widely considered "memorable", albeit the same pictures would raise many a eyebrows among the technical-perfectionists above, and they are often so busy with the next thing they want to say with an image to become unable to enjoy their achievements for a brief moment.
I suppose you could see a perfectionist as someone prepared for the moment, and the other who treats progress as a long term aim to perfect his work. I am in the middle, but all my life I have been too obsessed with tiny details. I'll be buying a small camera to shoot whenever I should, it is beautiful to be able to do that. It's a short vs long term thing.All the photographers are aiming towards some ideal of perfection, being it technical, linguistic, artistic, or any combination of the above. Just, no two photographers would ever agree on which such ideal should be. Otherwise, photography would be massively boring, there would be no reason to share our work with others, and there would be no need for a place like Photrio, at all...![]()
I share that habit, esp with my film camera, but development takes so long that I basically never use it.Then there are photographers to whom the sheer pleasure of taking a tangible record of a single, infinitesimal moment in time is enough satisfaction to keep going and expose the next roll, many more rolls, in an insatiable down-hill run to record more moments, all the moments, and possibly, at least once in a lifetime, "the perfect moment", provided that it existed, ever.
we should aknowledge that the perfection sought by different people will unavoidably be of different kinds and flavours
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