Yes, it's the oils in your recipe that gave you white soap.The previous batch i made that was without palm oil was not like this. It was bit yellowish. Had a clean look.
However these soaps looks rough and not very clean. They contained palm oil..
As for the refrigeration part, they were in the mold for 2-3 days and I unmolded them today. This is how they look after so they did gel i believe since it very hot here too.
As for the fragnance, im using rose oil and geranium at around 3 % of oil in weight. They are within dermal limits tho
Also not expecting them to be translucent. They should look either whitish or yellowish.but the design should also look clean.its very rough. Do you know why?
Is this due to the salt added?
I have no experience with rose oil & geranium fragrances, neither FOs nor EOs for either, so cannot say if they are responsible for the yellow spots I see. Maybe they are.
When the detail of a mold is intricate and I want the soap to come out 'clean' or more specifically clearly showing the fine detail rather than 'rough' (is that what you mean by crumbly?), I put a release agent on the inside surface of the mold.
Regarding the salt question let me ask you this: Was the salt completely dissolved and in solution without any salty residue when you mixed it into the batter (or added they lye to the salt solution)? If so, I would not expect that to cause the roughness in the amount you used. HOWEVER, when adding dry salt to soap batter, I do get roughness throughout the soap, including on the outer surface.
Well, it may be my eyes, or my monitor. They are blurry to me and I cannot really see the crumblyness. But if I can see that the design detail is not what one might expect of a fine detail mold. But maybe that's why it looks blurry to me. My brain my just be translating what my eyes see as blurry when it is not.I have attached 4 images. Check out the link too. Its a closeup of the soap for better insights