FWIW, my car currently has the 30 mm rear spring pads, but it still sags are the rear. By semi-calibrated eyeball, I'd say it had about 1-2 degrees negative camber. Just for fun, I made some 10 mm spacers and installed them yesterday. This reduced the negative camber, but the camber is still slightly negative. I think a 10 mm lift is fairly significant, but to get all the way to the factory spec of 1.5 degrees positive camber, the spacers would have to be on the order of 25 mm thick... which would make me extremely nervous... and I don't recommend the 'additional spacer' approach. I think I'm looking at new springs as a winter project.
Each car and set of springs is going to be different, and what you can do will depend on (a) amount of sag (and how much lift you need to correct it) and (b) which thickness pads are already in there. If you have the 18 or 24 mm pads, and a 6 or 12 mm lift will do the job, that's the easiest approach. They aren't that hard to change. If you need more lift than thicker pads can give you, new springs are probably the answer. First research project is to see which pads you've got.
A Dalton's point is good, too. Sagged springs are probably no longer on spec for spring rate. Trouble is, if you put in new rear springs, you probably new need fronts as well. Rats, my project just got bigger... maybe negative camber is ok after all, I'll just replace the rear tires frequently... sigh.
George Davis
'69 280 SL Euro manual