The wind will give you away no matter what, and sometimes the deer act like they can't smell you anyway. I think most everything we do to eliminate scent is largely an effort in futility.
I think your total presence in the woods is what needs worked on; noise, odor, attitude, etc.
I think we need to work on that sixth sense that we don't understand. They always said animals can smell fear....which I take to mean animals can detect changes in our intent...perhaps through personal pheramones that we emit when in the predator mode. It could be why a person who doesn't hunt tends to see a lot of deer when just hiking through the woods. Science has trouble, however, dealing with intangible things and hasn't figured them out yet so it's unlikely one can come up with anything but conjecture; which is what most "odor" conclusions are based on.
I have a friend whose wife bowhunts. Of course she hunts like she shops...bath before hunting, cologne and makeup, et al. She always has deer around here stand. Probably because she doesn't smell like the average human being. Emory Loiselle, who did a lot of archery tests for Archery World or Bow and Arrow magazines, wrote of his wife doing the same thing; she prepared for hunting like she did for going out, and she always had deer around her as well.
My own experience seems to lend creedence to that thought. How do you measure intent?
Frankly I will wear what is most comfortable in the woods and not waste my money on lures or scents and try to think I'm looking for stumps rather than critters. It's worked so far.