Welcome to SMF,
@Hoang Duong !
You seem to already have some experience with formulating liquid soaps. If you don't mind, feel free to introduce yourself, your knowledge, and your motivation in the
introduction forum!
To your specific question: I guess you have neutralised the FFAs with KOH to make up the respective potassium salts?
Soaps from long-chain fatty acids (palmitic, stearic) have a very temperature-dependent solubility. It's the reason why Hot Process and rebatching works for bar soap (liquid-ish at high temperature, solidifying upon cooling).
In liquid soap, you either have to live with/work with/embrace an opaque look, or avoid long-chain saturated FAs (e. g. use oleic instead of palmitic/stearic acid). Mid-chain saturated soaps (lauric/myristic) don't precipitate, but the soaps can feel harsh and “stripping” to the skin in an uncomfortable way.
When a hot, clear potassium stearate/palmitate solution cools down, the soaps arrange into tiny crystals that precipitate out of solution, and often shimmer like mother-of-pearl, which can be a quite attractive appearance.
It's still soap, this is a purely physical process and does in no way interfere with the performance of the soap. It might be a cosmetic issue if the tiny crystals settle to the bottom and the soap appears to “tip over”. Unfortunately this is a slow process that is difficult to forecast, and depends on many things like storage temperature, concentration/dilution, and viscosity.
Is there a reason why you use free fatty acids, and not create your own FA profile via saponification of oils/fats?
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/what-to-expect-from-various-oils-in-ls.62864/