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I think that's a really good observation. We're all programmed to breed birds that to the smallest feather comply with every detail listed in the APA Standard of Perfection, and landrace breeds have never learned to read that book. Landraces are more diverse in appearance because it is environmental pressure, and not obsessive hobbyists, that determine the composition of the chicken. Evolution, as compared to people, has a different goal in mind with its culling program. So, when hobbyists are dealing with landraces it takes a heightened tolerance for differences among individuals within the breed. The breed also stays truer to its composition as a landrace if breeders don't emphasize certain traits through selection.
These ideas took some getting used to, but in talking with hedemora breeders in Sweden, it's clear that making the birds appear more uniform through rigid selection by the hobbyist is an outcome to be avoided. In observing my Swedish flower hens, I've learned to take as much pleasure in the differences as the similarities. It's hard to quantify, but even with the differences in color and feather pattern, when you look at a flock of these birds you can see they're the same breed.