With those oils, you could look at the below recipe as a starting point and then slowly work on modifying it as you identify traits you want in your soap. What you end up liking in your soap, and the product you may eventually be willing to morally and ethically stand by as "good" soap when you start selling (something you mentioned wanting to do in another thread), will differ from what someone else does.
For example, plenty of people say don't use shea butter in soap because as a rinse off product, it's just a waste; you don't get the benefits of it and it's expensive comparatively to other oils. I, personally, disagree because I FEEL a difference in soaps that do and don't have shea. So my soap includes shea. I don't think those offering the advice are wrong; it just doesn't align to what I want in my soap.
Anyway, the below recipe is okay (to me). It was the recipe I used for my first two batches to get an understanding of the fundamentals needed for soap making (tools, process, observing "trace", etc). I was able to make two and three color swirls with it without any real problem. I ditched it at batch number three and haven't looked back. Credit for this recipe to Katie at Royalty Soaps since it was provided, and I obtained it, from her "Royal Creative Academy" Youtube series (it was provided, and is still available, for free).
Subjectively speaking, if you run the numbers it's not the "best" soap. It's decent. It's not the longest lasting or the hardest and it might be more conditioning than some want. For me it lacks the creamy lotion-like lather that I love. And for some at 20% coconut oil and only 5% superfat, it's going to be way too drying.
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