Beth Ditto has been advocating for fat acceptance for the past decade, and while she is thrilled the movement has taken off, she wishes people would stop slamming curvy models like Ashley Graham for not being 'fat enough'.

Speaking with Vogue, the 36-year-old singer said the fat acceptance movement has spread in a 'beautiful way and it's really cool', recalling how she was having similar conversations ten years ago.

However, the self-described 'fat feminist lesbian' noted that there is still a long way to go as 'we are seeing a lot of conventional beauty ideas being put into the fat movement' — which isn't the point.

Growing movement: Beth Ditto is thrilled that the fat acceptance has spread in a 'beautiful way', but she said there is still work to do

Not helping: The singer sees conventional beauty ideas being put into the fat moment, and women like Ashley Graham (pictured) are facing backlash because of their hourglass figures

'It’s not about making fashion accept you,' she explained. 'Like, right now, Ashley Graham has gotten a lot of backlash because people say she’s "not fat enough" and that not everyone is an hourglass.

'But she is, and people should shut up. They blame her instead of the industry — it makes me so irritated! It’s like, just quit being mean to each other. It’s not hard to be decent.'

The singer, who is promoting 'Fake Sugar', the first album of her solo career, found fame with her band Gossip, an indie rock group that formed in Washington in 1999.

During her rise to fame, Beth rocked a black bob and red lips, and she never shied away from speaking about size and body acceptance. However, the star is now sporting a new look.

Styling: Beth donned a custom Gucci suit at the Gucci Cruise 2018 fashion show in Florence, Italy, last week

Rise to fame: Beth rocked a black bob and red lips when she was with her band, Gossip (pictured). She is now promoting her first solo album, 'Fake Sugar'

Instead of her jet-black hair, she has long chestnut waves. But she still refuses to grow out her short bangs.

'A stylist told me the other day that I should grow my bangs out, and I had to tell her, "It’s not always about being pretty. Sometimes it’s about looking bigger".

'As I’ve gotten older, the black hair made less sense on my face,' she said. 'But I miss being able to look like my weird punk self all the time, even on airplanes. That’s why I kept the bangs.'

Before she started working with her producer Jennifer Decilveo, Beth met with several male producers in Los Angeles, but couldn't connect with anyone of them. She even found herself being mansplained.

The Arkansas native admitted that with the exception of a few guys, she doesn't think 'men listen in the same way' when they are discussing something they have knowledge of but don't necessarily have a ton of experience in.

Look of love: Beth has been married to her wife, Kristin Ogata (right), since 2013

Wedded bliss: Although the two have known each other since they were 18, Beth said 'there's just something that's solid' about being married

'That was the worst to me, being explained music by a 22-year-old who just got into it as an EDM producer,' she said, noting that she found someone she could trust and really talk to when she started working with Jennifer.

As for her home life, Beth has been married to her wife, Kristin Ogata, since 2013.

'When people say they married their best friend, well, I really did it,' she said of her wife.

Although they've known each other since they were 18, she said their relationship is different now they are married.

'There’s something that’s just solid, in a way that it was not solid before,' she explained.