avoid the use of shim,of any material , I once saw at work an operator on the next machine to me get get his finger cut quite badly from a piece of shim used to protect the work ,it was going round in the chuck like a bacon slicer,he never did it again and neither did I ,I always use pieces of brass or aluminium which are at least 1.5 mm thick and the edges are heavily deburred with a file, another snag with shim in larger chucks,particularly four jaws is that the serrations on the jaws indent the shim and still mark the work.
regarding work in vices, where I was apprenticed all the bench vices had the hardened jaws surface ground flat, provided the jaws are kept free of filings the work does not get marked ,essential for instrument and model making ,I noticed over the years that toolmakers used solid aluminium jaws permanently fixed to the vice, mechanics tend to use bent over thick ali sheet vice clams, so that they can easily get to the serrated jaws, bodgers just muck up everything with serrated jaws, Holding delicate work in detachable fibre jaws should be avoided as they are not flat and distort the job