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Michael Bay Comics
Monday, September 1, 2008

The Kirkman Manifesto
Sunday, August 24, 2008

Confessions from the Letterer
Friday, August 8, 2008

Another Sketchbook Bites the Dust
Monday, July 21, 2008

Lightbox
Sunday, July 13, 2008

People that Inspire
Sunday, July 6, 2008

This Thing of Ours
Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Holy Trinity, Batman!
Sunday, June 8, 2008

I Heart Amazing Spider-Man #26
Monday, May 26, 2008

Inside Deep 6
Sunday, May 18, 2008

Iron Man: Love the Movie, Hate the Comic
Monday, May 12, 2008

Life at Table E8
Sunday, April 27, 2008

Fanboys Don’t Count
Saturday, April 12, 2008

Are Floppies Dead?
Thursday, March 20, 2008

Ordinary Life is Pretty Complex Stuff
Wednesday, March 12, 2008

John Romita Jr. Kicks Ass
Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Food One Represent
Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Blind Item!
Wednesday, February 20, 2008

The R. Crumb Influence
Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Getting to Know the Letterer
Wednesday, February 6, 2008




Who is... Randy Gentile?

After bouncing around at a few local colleges in upstate New York, Randy Gentile made the decision to move to New York City where he attended Pratt Institute. He landed an internship in the famous Marvel Bullpen and was able to turn that into a full-time gig in the now defunct Marvel in-house lettering department. He later transitioned to Chris Eliopoulos’ Virtual Calligraphy lettering studio.

With VC he lettered damn near every Marvel book at one time or another including Amazing Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, Incredible Hulk, Iron Man, Uncanny X-Men, Punisher, and Marville… wait, Marville?

Anyway, after 7 years of lettering Randy decided to make a go of it on his own without the aid of Chris “Obi-Wan” Eliopoulos. Since then he’s begun lettering for DC Comics where his work can be seen in funny books like Batman, Detective Comics, Gotham Underground, Teen Titans and Booster Gold.

Outside of his lettering work he self-publishes an autobiographical comic called NYComix and an uber-fast paced superhero strip called Randall. Both comics have been featured on Comic Geek Speak and Fanboy Radio.

When he’s not wallowing in lettering self-pity he spends his time in Brooklyn along with his lovely wife, Ereisa and their three cats Finnian, Don Fanucci and Olive.

Another Sketchbook Bites the Dust

Print 'Another Sketchbook Bites the Dust'Recommend 'Another Sketchbook Bites the Dust'Discuss 'Another Sketchbook Bites the Dust'Email Randy GentileBy Randy Gentile

I don't know of too many artists that don't carry a sketchbook with them at all times. Some do incredible work in their books, while others like myself, use it almost as a diary. The bulk of my sketchbooks are filled with "Subway Sketches". Which is something that was introduced to me by a teacher at Pratt. He or she (sadly I can't remember what teacher is was) made it a homework assignment to bring in a few pages of our sketchbooks filled with people we drew on the subway. At first it was tough for me. I'd hunch over my sketchbook in a vain attempt to hide what I was doing but as time went by I reached a place where I could just draw without caring who was watching me. Although I do feel weird when the person whom I'm sketching realizes that I'm using them as a figure drawing exercise. A handful of times people have gotten up and walked away after realizing what I was doing but after the hundreds of people I've drawn that's a really rare occurrence.

Unfortunately, working from home for 4 years made it tougher and tougher to fill up my sketchbook. I'd only ride on the train a few times a month but with my job forcing me back into the NYC rat race I just finished a great little sketchbook that my wife bought me back in 2004. I can't believe it took me this long to fill up 192 pages, but it did. So before I file this little book on the shelf with all my other spent sketchbooks, I thought I'd scan a few choice pages and throw them up here on the bog. Flipping through it's really fun to see the work go from good to awful to horrendous to bad. It was also pretty wild to see quite a few rants about wanting to get out of lettering. I also did a few streams of conscious comix for the first time, something that I'll diffidently be doing again in my new sketchbook.

So check out a few random sketches.

  1. Cover

    After I finish every sketchbook I go through it and write down anything that I did in it that I think I might need and/or want to use later on. There are 3 upcoming NYComix in this sketchbook and they're noted at the bottom. I also did the Randall Redesigns in this in there
  2. .

  3. NYComix Volume 2 Mini Comic Cover Ideas

    I knew from the start I wanted to do a stencil, but none of these ideas made it very far.


  4. Old Man

    People get off the train before you can finish drawing all the time. This guy got up right when I started and it morphed into this weird thing.


  5. Randall Redesigns

    The redesigns just started in here and then went on to a bigger 9x12" sketchbook I use for character designs and page thumbnails for comix. I even do a few pages in that sketchbook instead of on art board. But that's fairly rare.


  6. Comix
    Chris Ware's sketchbooks got me into doing comics in my sketchbook. Something I never considered before. None of these will become more than this, but one will... (Although not the one I'm showing here.)


  7. Monk's Mood

    Listening to Jazz on the subway is a favorite pastime of mine. This was done while listening to Thelonious Monk's "Monk's Mood."


  8. DMV

    Not done on the Subway but at the Midtown Manhattan DMV. I think it was an almost 4 hour wait. The character is "Art" who I guess is becoming my other comic persona...he made an appearance in the first (and so far, only) "LazyComix Presents..." More of the ol' curmudgeon to come.


  9. Subway Sketch

    One of the more tolerable examples of my subway sketches. This one done on the way home from my first day at the new job.

So there you have a few excerpts from my recently depleted sketchbook. I'm already 2 pages into a new one. Let's hope this one doesn't take almost 3 years to finish.

Thanks for reading...

Font you!
--Randy


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