1200g coconut oil
1410g olive oil
2025g vegetable shortening
total= 4635
Crisco is not the veg shortening, it's copha which is CO, so that makes the recipe 70% CO and 30% OO.
So based on this information, try plugging it in to the soap calc like this:
CO 1200g + 1418g = 2618g (this is the original 25% CO + 70% CO in the shortening)
OO 1410g + 607g = 2017g (this is original 30% OO + 30% OO in the shortening)
I plugged into the soap calc with 40% lye solution and 20% Superfat (which I think is too high, this soap is only 50-ish% CO, in my shoes I would do 12-15% SF and give it a good long cure).
You can see even with 20% superfat, the lye is still quite more than you are using. Your soap has a very high superfat - in order to get the lye number from the recipe in post #46 I had to plug in a 49% superfat.
That means half of your oils are not being made into soap. This is not good soap.
To summarize what has been said previously:
Every oil has an SAP value - this how many milligrams of sodium/potassium hydroxide are needed to completely saponify 1g of oil. This number varies for each oil. It will even vary slightly from calculator to calculator as the number is typically given in a range, so some calcs will be set differently on that range. All the calcs will still give you accurate calculations as these variances are typically in thousandths of a gram (.00xg).
Lye is calculated by the oil used. (amount of oil x SAP value = amount of lye)
Superfat/lye discount: two terms used interchangeably that result in a percentage of oils left unsaponified. Typically in a soap calc it is called superfat, but the calculations will reduce the amount of lye used to whatever percentage you specify.
Lye concentration: The calculated lye amount + liquid. You can change the concentration in the range of 25% (more water) to 50% (less water), but this will not change the amount of lye used.
Simply put: I think you need to spend some time studying how soap is made.