Leaving an edge 0.75mm before heat treatment works well for blades that are oil quenched and treated without foil wrapping, especially in simple forges. It is fairly easy to reach and exceed 800degC temperature with a one-brick forge and small propane torch. Two brick is even better. The problem is that the area heated is not large. Bigger burner and larger volume can also get hotter fairly easily. If your edge is really thin it may over heat while you are waiting for the rest of the blade to come up to temperature. You will also get some degree of decarburisation on the surface of the steel while it is at temperature. Start with an almost finished edge (as you can with foil wrapped stainless that is air or plate quenched) and your blade won't cut properly until you have sharpened off that outer low carbon layer.
Good call using 1095 rather than O1 to start with. I started with O1, as do many, and it can be made to work using simple heat treat methods, but it should really be soaked at temperature for over 10 minutes, which is very hard to do without a kiln. I managed an approximation by performing three quench cycles.
Rather a good source for info on simple steels and their heat treatment.
http://www.cashenblades.com/info.html
And for the seriously technical:
https://archive.org/details/Metallu..._Others_who_Heat_Treat_and_Forge_Steel_By_Joh