G'Day
A point for flat sails.
One of the benefits of junk rigs is the distribution of all the strain of wind, motion and manoeuvres to many component parts - parrels, sheets, battens, yard, mast and fabric.
If we make the fabric baggy, the routine diagonal strain it would have taken has to be concentrated in a Hong Kong parrel or luff parrel. That's visually obvious, and when those parrels are set up all seems well to the eye.
But sudden loads from gybing, gusts, etc. become concentrated in the luff and leech and batten-ends, as well as the new HK parrel attachments, because there's no longer a fabric membrane ready to distribute the strain.
I know the scantlings of some cambered sails take this into account, with wide tabling and larger thicker corner reinforcements and in some cases perimeter boltrope or webbing. If somebody built baggy sails of Odyssey or some such light fabric, (or worse, of stiffer Dacron) with the light edges and corners that flat sails circumnavigate the world with, that junk rig would have lost part of its security - distributed strain - for windward gain.
It's Tristram E that makes me think of this now. She has old flat sails that I'm confident would cross the Pacific. Take a roll of duct tape. If they were old and cambered, even if well-reinforced originally, I'd be more suspicious. And need more than duct tape to make repairs.
I have huge respect for the innovators, reinventors, perfectors of the junk rig. But even more for the essence of the rig itself.
Cheers,
Kurt