My opinions, FWIW.
The answer to most of those questions is "depends"
"High carbon" covers a lot of different steels. Some can only get to 57-58 as quenched. Others are high 60's and need to be drawn back quite a bit.
Hardness in the blade depends on the size of the blade, intended use and hardening method.
A small caper can be left fairly hard - 60 Rc or so and not have any issues. Leave a big camp knife that hard and you'll have some problems though. 54-57 is more like it for big knives...
Unless you've edge quenched it or plan on differentially drawing the temper back. Then you can get away with an edge that's 58-60, as long as your spine is in the low 50's. I like to have less than 1/3 of the blade hard when doing this.
A knife that's only going to be used for skinning can be left a little harder, but if you're going to be splitting wood, digging broadheads out of trees or using it as a prybar go softer or you're likely to snap a blade. Edge geometry plays into the decision as well. If you have a real delicate, thin edge and leave it harder it's prone to chipping or cracking with lateral force. Leave it a bit beefier though and you're fine.
Like I said, "depends" :D Choose a design, make it, temper it, test it. If the temper doesn't work for you retemper.
I'd think the industrial planer blades are HSS, aren't they?