It takes a little more work than that to mask odors for hunting, especially if you are stalking. The problem is that many of the odors that are normal to humans are triggers to hunted animals, and you have to work at removing a lot of different odors from different places.
Start from the inside - your body. You are a predator, and an animal that sweats. This is not a common condition in the natural world and makes you very obvious to hunted animals. So you need to control the smells coming out of your skin. Some of the most serious close-in stalkers I know do that by going totally vegan for three or four months before hunting trips. They claim it changes the chemical composition of their sweat, removing many of the acids associated with meat digestion and replacing them with the more ammoniac smells of vegetable digestion. Yes, they do smell different, and they are successful hunters.
Then you have the surface of your body, with all the smells of soaps, detergents, and perfumes that help us identify each other. Well, our noses aren't that good and soaps and perfumes are going to be far more obvious to animals. Since these are not normal natural smells, especially in the concentrations we wear them, they are immediate flags for wildlife. This is a hard problem to deal with - soap and perfume smells are for the most part not going to be removed by any of the deodorants you are suggesting, and avoiding soap just increases your own natural scent. My suggestion would be to avoid soap and try to find some detergent that is odorless and has no perfumes or additives.
Next your clothing, with an additional assortment of soaps and perfumes. This is a little easier - wash with plain water and leave to air out for several days before wearing them.
Now your equipment - oils and metals, especially rusty metals, smell. Plastic and rubber smells. Gunpowder residue smells. Wood finishes smell. Leather smells. And none of these smells are natural. There isn't much you can do about any of these smells, either. The best thing you can do is stick to wood and cloth, and use equipment that is at least several seasons old.
So no, Febreze isn't going to make you smell less, and neither will propylene glycol. These are not normal outdoor smells - if you can take a whiff from an open bottle and identify the product, any hunted animal downwind of you will be able to do the same. For everything else, the best you can do is to clean everything as thoroughly as possible and let it air out, avoid new gear, and either change or cover your own natural scents. If you are really obsessive about it, you will eventually train your own nose to pick up the odors of your gear, and you will know what you need to fix or cover. If you can smell it up close, an animal can smell it downwind.