Congratulations on your first soap!
The lard smell never goes away, which is one of the reasons the commercial soap makers don't use it. Tallow is mildly detectable in an old soap, but the lard smell fades a little bit at first, and then gets stronger again as the soap ages. The one supermarket brand is a mix of tallow and lard, from memory (you'd have to read the label to check - it's the one in red and silver foil).
I can smell it even in small amounts, and I don't like it, but most people here who use it seem to be happy covering it's smell with fragrances and using it at a modest percentage of the recipe, so you might be ok if you a) don't use too much in your recipe b) don't overheat it, c) cover up it's piggyness with fragrance and d) don't keep the soap for a long time.
Other than that, it's supposed to be marvelous.
The lard smell never goes away, which is one of the reasons the commercial soap makers don't use it. Tallow is mildly detectable in an old soap, but the lard smell fades a little bit at first, and then gets stronger again as the soap ages. The one supermarket brand is a mix of tallow and lard, from memory (you'd have to read the label to check - it's the one in red and silver foil).
I can smell it even in small amounts, and I don't like it, but most people here who use it seem to be happy covering it's smell with fragrances and using it at a modest percentage of the recipe, so you might be ok if you a) don't use too much in your recipe b) don't overheat it, c) cover up it's piggyness with fragrance and d) don't keep the soap for a long time.
Other than that, it's supposed to be marvelous.