Materials

Costus

Unwashed hair/Wet dog

Beeswax

Urine/Dirty panties

Cumin

Typical body odour/Sweat

Orris

Babies head

Valerian

Sweaty feet

Karo

Fleshy/Musky

Cassie

Semen

Hay

Sweet/Earthy

Amber

Vanillic/Resinous

Indole

Fecal/Dirty

Cadaverine

Sperm

Nonenal

Mature people

Deer musk

Genitalia/Ammonia

Civet

Animal/Fecal

Castoreum

Leather/Amber

Ambergris

Sensous/Earthy

The above materials will, aid in the creation of a sexy human olfactory accord and when I say sexy, I mean pheromonic, lustrous and beastly not suave and spicy. Think, the smell of sex in a bottle, incredibly dirty sex.

“There exists widely diffused throughout Nature a distinct group of sexual odours, the so-called capryl odours, which have a natural biological connexion with the vita sexualis. These capryl odours, which already in plants play a sexual part, are in animals and in the human species localized in or near the genital organs (odoriferous glands of the beaver, the musk-ox, etc., the secretions of the male foreskin and the female vagina), or in other cases are found in the general secretions, such as the sweat. Recently Gustav Klein has succeeded in proving that a definite group of glands in the female genital organs (glandulx vestibulares majores, or glands of Bartholin) must be regarded as a vestige from the time of periodic sexual excitement (rutting). At that time in the human species, as now in the lower animals, the sexual impulse was periodic in its activity, and the secretion of these odoriferous glands of the human female then served as a means of alluring members of the male sex. At the present time, these glands have for the most part lost their significance as specific stimuli. Now it is rather the exhalation from the entire surface of the female body which exercises the erotic influence. Cases in which such stimuli proceed exclusively from the female genital organs are regarded by Klein as a phylogenetic vestige of the primitive relations between the rutting odours of the female and sexual excitement in the male.” The Sexual Life Of Our Time – Iwan Bloch, M.D. (Public Domain)