I made GMS the day before yesterday. I divided the batter into two batches because I planned to use two different FOs, both brand new from Candle Science: “Rose Petals” and “French Lilac.” I read their reviews on the CS website so I knew they would accelerate and tried to plan accordingly. I used the Lilac at 3% and the Rose at 6% since those were CS’s recommended usage rates. Before all that I made my GM lye solution in an ice bath and ensured the temps did not exceed 84 F. I mixed that with a mini blender after the frozen GM dissolved. I then added my completely pre-dissolved Na Gluconate and Sorbitol to the lye solution and mixed thoroughly. Once that was done I added to my warm oils (103 F) and SB’d to emulsion. At that point I split the batter into two batches and added my colorants (Nurture Soap mica). I hand stirred the French Lilac to one batch and immediately poured into individual cavity molds. The batter thickened rapidly and was pretty gloppy by the end. I repeated the process for the other batch with the Rose Petals and it poured more easily, and was not as gloppy by the end of the pour. Amazingly (for me), I was able to unmold both batches after 4 hours and put them on my curing shelf. The next day I saw orange speckles on the Lilac batch. The Rose batch was fine and it smelled likes roses. The lilac batch doesn’t smell like lilac at all. In fact, it’s a bit unpleasant. So my question is, is it possible that the lilac FO scorched the GM and that’s what caused the orange speckles and off odor? Could it possibly be DOS? I also made two soy candles using the lilac and they do indeed smell like lilac. The hearts are the suspect soaps. The flower is the rose soap that turned out very nicely.