If the lock is properly set up. I.E. sear to notch engagement and sear spring tuning, the distance from trigger pivot point to sear can be a lot more than .75 and still have a light crisp trigger. IF you move it too close and the sear notch is too deep its easy to end up with a creepy trigger. Having built 3 Colonials all had trigger pulls in the 3 1/2 to 4 pound range and were very good “out of the box” (but the last has a SS trigger). Its not in the trigger as much as it is in the lock. If we, for example, look to the sear engagement of 19th c. Colt SA revolvers or even copies we get an idea of how small the sear nose/notch can be. But many mass produced locks are at least a little “off”.
I built a rifle with casting from TRS , Manton rifle lock, and it has, by conventional wisdom here, a horrendous distance from pivot to sear. But it has a light crisp trigger. Because the original lock maker set it up correctly. I would have to disassemble the rifle to refresh my memory but its about 1”.