Hopefully theses are more helpful, thank you!
The father looks pretty much like a Cream Legbar, but he seems to only have one barring gene (which is how he produced the daughter in the first post, with no barring gene.)
For who the mother is, that is a tough one.
I think the Orloff is probably not the mother, because the pullet does not show muff/beard and she does not show the Orloff's comb type either. It's possible the Orloff may carry recessive genes for single comb and not-muff/beard, but I would put the Orloff as "unlikely" to be the mother.
I think the pullet would have a richer gold/brown color on much of her body, if her mother was any of the richly-colored hens (Gold Laced Wyandotte, Rhode Island Red, Orloff), but of course I could be wrong on that.
Maybe the Silver Laced Wyandotte? A Wyandotte "should" give a rose comb to all chicks, but it is pretty common to have Wyandottes that actually produce some chicks with single combs. And she would have genes that contribute to lighter body color on the pullet in question.
Or maybe the Black Sexlink, because there is a good chance that she carries the genes to make this coloring possible.
But from what I see in the photos, I can't completely rule out any of the hens, because there are just so many possibilities genetically.
Does the pullet have white feet? If she has white feet, and if her father has yellow feet, then she must have a mother with either white feet, or dark feet with white soles. But if the pullet's foot color matches her father's foot color, then we can't figure out the mother by foot color either.