Hi,
It depends a bit upon which "System 7" you are referring to (BTW, there is a "System 7.x and older System Software" forum
here). The supported versions for the Macintosh LC can be seen
in this document. You can find System 7.0 (e.g., the British English version
here) at the Apple web site. System 7.0.1 (the British English version
here) may be the best choice for the computer in question. System 7.5.3 (for example, the Bulgarian version
here or the North American English version
here) would require at least 4 MB of RAM (but will be relatively slow on this machine).
Please note that the installation procedure is entirely different with System 7.5.3. In that case you do not create sector-copied floppies from disk images. Instead all the parts (once the .bin has been decoded) together constitute one large image. The idea here is to transfer/copy all files to the hard disk of the computer where the system software is to be installed. If necessary, since each downloadable file is small enough, one can use a 1.44 MB floppy disk for the transfers. A system folder drag-copied to the hard disk from a tools disk or similar could act as a temporary operating system (this will free the floppy drive for transfers).
With System 7.0.1 (as an example) on the other hand, the normal way would be to use
Disk Copy 4.2 under Mac OS 9 or earlier on a
semi-old Mac (with a built-in floppy drive) to create sector-copied disks. You could try to run the Disk Copy 4.2 utility under the existing French operating system on the LC. Load each image file, then click on the Make A Copy button. I deliberately mentioned the British system software above, because this version has been made available in the form of separate files (not inside a self-mounting image file as the North American 7.0.1). This makes it easier if you have to use another platform for the creation of the floppies. It is, for instance, possible to produce correct floppies from the old Disk Copy 4.2 format images on a Windows PC, if a special technique is used. The first System 7.0.1 installation disk is bootable (and so is the Disk Tools floppy).
I have not tested the method for Mac OS X described in
this article, but it does not appear to be totally without complication.
Jan