Hi,
Photoshop and i1 Profiler are used industry wide the way they work right now. The way differing lighting conditions are used in profile building is acceoted industry wide.
Note: You actually don't have to save multiple text files to make the 3 different profiles in i1Profiler,
after measuring the chart to collect the "training data" for multiple conditions, stil in the measurement window you now select the lighting condition you want, then move on step by step to profile creation.
Later you can go back to the measure window - select a different condition and build another profile
Yes, any ICC profile can contain the "training data" for all 3 measurement conditions, but it doesn't contain 3 sets of calculated ICC profile tables. Only one set of tables is created when making the profile.
Photoshop doesn't have the capability to create ICC profiles from training data, so it cannot use the training data you mention in the way you would like it to.
Photoshop simply uses the profile its been given in providing colour managed preview of your image.
You need to build 3 profiles, each with one of the 3 light sources, to do what you are asking to do.
We volunteers here who help out users on this forum have no power over Adobe to make them change the way the program works - furthermore you'll probably appreciate that as a good print profiler software has a quite singinificant cost, Adobe are unlikely to duplicate the work of X-Rite et al by licencing and embedding profile building in the program.
I hope this helps
if so, please "like" my reply and if you're OK now, please mark it as "correct", so that others who have similar issues can see the solution
thanks
neil barstow, colourmanagement.net
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