OK, so here's how sundays soaps turned out.
Peppermint: slid out of the Pringles mold OK with a little coaxing. It had volcanoed a bit in the mold so was a little misshapen, but a round hockey puck shape. The brick red oxide is so close in color to the burgandy oxide of the Sandalwood soap. Reds are notoriously hard to get with natural colorants oxides. If you use lab created colors like Food Drug and Cosmetic (FD&C) colorants you can get a truer red.
Fennel: a semi nice ITP swirl, but the white could have been more intense to contrast more against the black, it did slide out of the mold a little better with the mineral oil coating that I did in the mold. Still kind of a pain though.
Dream type: I pretty much had to tear apart the Nutter Butter cookie tray to get the soap out, not that it was difficult to unmold but because the plastic tray was so flimsy. I don't think CP soaping is good for this type of mold. The ridges were too detailed and my soap didn't really retain the nice ridge shapes. Or maybe the soap was still too soft. Also the soaps came out a little too thin in the mold. I like my bars at least 1 inch thick and these were too thin, but OK for tester batches
Sweet Pea: the soap was a dream to unmold. They popped out so easily and they are so cute! Silicone molds are great. The ultramarine pink oxide was too weak, I didn't really get a good pink color sort of a light beige with a hint of pink.
Interesting to note. I am not a great fan of the sandalwood fragrance, but if I sniff it with the grapefruit soap its wonderful. So next time I'll need to cut the sandalwood with a citrus or something. I think the sandalwood alone is a bit too woodsy for me.
As far as the qualities of the soap themselves will have to wait 4 weeks of drying/curing time until they are ready to be used.