Glad to hear that Max. As you well know, the backs of the heads and upper hackle on your two bantam females are too black where they should be orange with black striping. You can spot that before they get too old, but they do tend to get better with age. You should not have any problems with overall size or with shank or skin color unless some develop mulberry color in their faces. Don't mind a few white flecks or wing tips in the juvenile feathers, they will go away. You will get some females that are too black and some that have a lot of shafting in the lacing - those can be culled fairly soon. But I would start first with any obvious defects, as with any other variety. Crooked toes, malformed beaks, crooked keels, broken down hips, that type of thing. I tend to cull early for what I call "squawkers." Those would be the ones, when you pick them up, that don't stop squawking. Temperament can be inheritable to a great extent, and those would be the types that could be very difficult to coop train for show. Hope that gives you some ideas. If you end up with any extras that are decent, I would sure be interested.