Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Most glass has a tint (unless you are using high grade optical glass), so no surprise there. Most commonly used glass is float glass, which tends to have a green tint due to the iron oxide it contains.
The ICC profile that you are creating is for the camera sensor and should give you a slightly better colour response curve than with the built-in default with Capture One (C!). It has nothing to do with colour correction.
I have built a profile one for daylight with my ColorChecker Passport that I use with my D810 with Adobe Camera Raw (ACR). Initially I also built one with flash, but there was not noticeable difference so I don't bother with a separate flash one any more.
I did notice it made a difference when I had the D800 (the reds were a bit strong with the custom profile), but there is virtually no detectable difference with the D810. I built a profile for Capture One many years ago, but never bothered when I changed cameras, I use C1 when doing tethered capture, but find ACR gives me a better workflow than C1 does, so I rarely use it as my raw convertor.
There should be some small colour differences as my Godox Witstro AD-360 has a ±200K tolerance on the base 5600K colour temperature, so in theory the light output can be between 5400K and 5800K, so that could explain some of the colour temperature difference. In practice I tend to see this more when I vary the power level and the flash is quite consistent when I shoot at the same output setting. I believe the AD200 has a similar colour temperature spec. Your soft box can influence colour temperature as well, depending on age, cleanliness, which baffles you use, etc.
When I pull a white balance, I tend to use the middle gray swatch, not the darker or lighter ones. The colours can change on the card as it ages or gets dirty too. When I shoot in the studio, I really don't get a noticeable change between shots, so I can't even guess why you are.