A Vice/vise was a standard task for budding apprentices. I have a huge range - from one's too heavy now to tiny little things to hold the pubic hairs on male midges.
Frankly, I have lost count but I still will make a special to do a specific job.
If you seriously take time to study what you have written- yes- what you have written, you will have to include chucks and collets and faceplates and a whole host of other things.
Today, I was holding a piece of steel which was 10 X3X3mm- with rounded ends clamped in a pair of surgeon's sewing pliers so that I could modify one for the Fagor rotary DRO on the top slide of my Sieg C4 lathe.
Perhaps you would benefit from reading up what the old masters wrote of their techniques. There is little benefit which is available to the beginner on the internet which is largely repetition and culled and described by inarticulate operators who bring very little to the hobby.
You must read the old classics and more importantly try to replicate what has been written.
This may well rustle a few feathers but many of today's people have stopped taking magazines which merely fill column inches- and keep the shareholders happy.
A few columns ago, I suggested the use of hot glue but I was merely slightly modifying what someone, dead and gone, had described a modified sticky concoction of resin, beeswax and perhaps a bit of tallow. Mine was somewhat more available. Life is like that!
Regards
Norm