![]() “I sat at home and took that class and two weeks later, I was sitting in an orchard with 2,000 people walking by me looking at my pumpkin carving.”īias’ carving skills are not limited to pumpkins. “I went online and bought a carving class from one of the best carvers in the world,” Bias said. Main St.īias taught himself how to carve pumpkins about five years ago by watching a YouTube video and then landed a pumpkin carving gig at the All Seasons Orchard in Woodstock. Finally, the boy died in this big castle on a hill and when he died, he came down outside in the yard and he rescued all of the lost souls of children who were abused and they lived happily ever after.”īias, 60, is an Ohio native who relocated to Rockford in 2016 and now owns the Buckbee Weed Company, an organic hemp store at 1018 S. His uncle adopted him and locked him in a room. “It was about a little boy who was abused. “I had to tell a story by carving a 100 pound pumpkin,” he said. More: Give this Rockford chef a piece of fruit, and he'll give you a work of artīias opted to tell a sobering tale that ends well. The competitors took on challenges designed to test their creativity and pumpkin prowess as they sculpt scenes that celebrate Halloween. ![]() The Rockford man is one of seven expert pumpkin carvers who will face off this weekend for the chance to win a $25,000 grand prize on the Food Network’s TV show “Outrageous Pumpkins.” ROCKFORD - Lincoln Bias has carved out quite a name for himself. View Gallery: Master carver Lincoln Bias of Rockford, Illinois ![]()
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