Paul,
actually, I can do minor adjustments to the camber on my sails, built with the barrel method.
On Johanna I reduced the tension along the battens with 10cm. This increased the bagginess. It also produced a number of wrinkles along the battens, and the vertical curve from batten to batten was closer to a semicircle than a trapeze. I think this improved her light-weather performance. On later boats, I have kept more stretch in the sail along the battens. There is now less wrinkles at the battens and the vertical curve looks closer to that seen on sails made by the shelf-foot (lens) method. The camber drops about 1/10, compared to when having the sail set up with no tension. On the three last sails I have made, I have used a cutting to give 9% camber and then stretched the sails along the battens, resulting in 8% camber when flying (the last sail, for Ingeborg, I have not tried yet.).
Actually I wrote about this subject in 2009.
Maybe it was good, after all, that I did not add broadseams along the battens, or I would not have been able to reshape the panels by pulling along the battens.
I guess my sails now are as close-winded as they can be without radical surgery. The mast is still there, robbing the camber at the luff on one tack ( that’s why I use quite little balance), and acting as a wind brake on the other one. My new aluminium mast for Ingeborg, at 150mm diameter (instead of 210mm of a wooden mast), at least reduces that drag.
Arne