NPC: now that I'm not typing on my phone anymore, I will try to help you to understand what I'm talking about.
So, 1. all soap will heat up to a point. It's caused by the chemical reaction of lye and fatty acids. Some people will even measure the amount of heat gained while mixing to know when to pour into the mold. What you want to do, depending upon how you want your soap to look in the finished product is either embrace this process or limit it. I happen to use both techniques depending upon what I want my final bar to look like. Now with testing, I have found that my soaps, with any sort of oxide in them, tend to get glycerine rivers during a gel phase, so, when I want a solid oxide color, I prefer not to gel. (I won't go into the fact that I have gotten glycerine rivers with natural colorants as well, that is a whole other convo) I take pains to limit how much my soap mixture will heat during saponification. So, I soap cool, use a cold wood mold, place it in the fridge and elevate the mold off the surface to allow the bottom to cool quickly or stay cool.
2. Soap molded in a log form or slab mold or of a large size will tend to heat up more, hence having to do the above process. In the past, doing these soaps in smaller form, either in my test 1 lb plastic mold or my thinner 3lb wood mold, it is easier to keep from gelling or if I want gel, I needed to insulate. In my 6lb wood molds, all I need to do is leave them right there on the shelf. In fact, I have some fragrance blends that if I don't babysit, will over heat in the mold, with no effort at all, causing glycerine rivers, brains and sometimes weeping fragrance oil.
3. none of this is happeneing because of too much heat in either my oil or my lye solutions at time of mixing.