Achromatic doublets are the standard for small refracting telescopes, including being in service as the objective in all or nearly all binoculars, field glasses, monoculars, and spotting scopes.
Add to that the fact that unless you're making WAY TOO BIG a print, you'll have a hard time telling the performance of one lens from another (you have to look at the grain, not the image, of an 8x10 from 35mm to tell a six-element asymmetric double Gauss from a Cook triplet), I don't know any good reason a suitably specified (focal length and aperture) doublet shouldn't work just fine.
The main limitation is that if you install a lens faster than f/8, you'll probably see blurring in the corners due to chromatic aberration -- what you'd see as color fringing in a telescope will print as blur. Make sure you have enough light (or patience) to stop down to f/8 or preferably f/11 when you print, and be aware of focus shift as you stop down, and you should get very acceptable prints.