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In June 2012 Ditto collaborated with MAC Cosmetics to create a make up collection. She opened (modeled) and closed the Jean Paul Gaultier spring 2011 fashion show during Paris Fashion Week in October 2010. Marianne Kirby, writing in The Guardian, said the "collection struck a nerve with its iconic pieces" and that it was an "international success". Her second collection for Evans launched in 2010 with just over 20 individual items. Ditto provided sketches and drew inspiration from her favourite vintage and charity shop clothes as well as bands like Blondie, The Slits and Grace Jones, and Art Deco movements. ĭitto launched her first plus-size collection for women's clothing retailer Evans on July 9, 2009, in collaboration with head of design Lisa Marie Peacock. Emily Hill, writing in The Guardian, was cynical of Love magazine's intentions, writing that "Beth Ditto on Love magazine is not evidence of fashion's new acceptance, but a diversion before emaciated normality returns". In February 2009 bi-annual British style magazine Love featured Ditto posed nude on the front cover of its premiere issue, with prominent public advertising.
Greer also praised Ditto for her motives, saying her "intention is to force acceptance of her body type, 5 ft tall and 15 stone, and by this strategy to challenge the conventional imagery of women". Germaine Greer, writing in The Guardian, said the magazine had "enough courage to put the coolest woman on the planet on the cover" whilst acknowledging its limits. In 2007 she was featured posed nude on the front cover of music magazine NME. In 2007–2008, Ditto contributed a fortnightly advice column on body image to The Guardian newspaper entitled 'What would Beth Ditto do?'.
She courted mild controversy in 2006 when she claimed to have eaten squirrels as a child. The true heart of feminism isn't about meeting other people's expectations around your body or your gender." She considers her favorite song to be " Oh Bondage Up Yours!" by X-Ray Spex. She also stated: "Artists I love, like Siouxsie Sioux and Patti Smith, have such radically different ways of embodying femininity, but they're both amazing punk women. She classes herself as a punk, and thus neither uses deodorant nor shaves under her armpits, having once remarked, "I think punks usually smell." She has cited Cyndi Lauper and Boy George as overall influences and Grace Jones and Peggy Moffitt as her beauty icons. She is known for her stage dances and her unique and revealing image. She has been an advocate for large women being body-positive and has been regularly photographed as an editorial model. Harrod Horatia, writing in The Telegraph, has said, "Where the stripped-down three-piece Gossip play propulsive, garage band blues, Ditto's own stuff is melancholic, soulful dance music, inspired by 'Eighties disco soul jams' that she loves, and the up-tempo pop-R&B of I Wanna Dance With Somebody-era Whitney Houston." ĭitto, who is openly lesbian, is well known for her outspoken support of both lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT), and feminist causes. She sang on Blondie's " A Rose by Any Name" from their 2013 album Ghosts of Download. In 2011, she released her own 4-track Beth Ditto EP, produced by James Ford and Jas Shaw of Simian Mobile Disco, on the re-launched Deconstruction Records.
In 2009, she sang on Simian Mobile Disco's track " Cruel Intentions" for their album of collaborations Temporary Pleasure. In 2008, she contributed vocals to the Crisis charity single "Consequences", a collaboration between various artists. In addition, she has been involved in other musical projects. She fronted the band Gossip from its formation in 1999 until its dissolution in 2016. At 18, she discovered bands like Nirvana, Pearl Jam, The Raincoats and Siouxsie and the Banshees. She moved to Olympia, Washington in 1999 then to Portland, Oregon in 2003, where she lives as of 2014. At age 13, she moved out of her mother's house and went to live with her aunt. She grew up Southern Baptist and Pentecostal, but is now an atheist. Ditto grew up in a poor family in Arkansas in the southern United States, with her mother, various stepfathers, and six siblings – two older brothers, an older sister, two younger brothers and a younger sister.