The general rule of thumb for most semi-hard wood cuttings is 50% shade with intermittant mist set to 3 seconds every 5 minutes from sun up to 1 hour before sun down (no mist at night). The rooting media should be 50/50 peat moss and pearlite or sterile sand. Use a dibble stick to make the hole in the media, and dip the slightly moist cutting in IBA powder. Then stick it in the hole and firm the soil around it so that the IBA rooting hormone does not get rubbed off.
For muscadine grape, I have had good success burrying part of the vine in moist sand. It should root in a month or two and then you can sever it from the vine and place it in a mist house. If the vine isn't long enough to reach the ground, you can suspend a pot from the trellis or arbor, slide the vine through the bottom drain hole and then fill with sand/soil. You don't need to wound the vine, but you will need to keep the soil moist. Muscadines naturally put out roots in response to moist conditions (if humidity is high, they will sometimes do this even in the air!).
You might try air layering some of the plants on your list. I believe it works well on fig and mulberry.