nah, medieval folk (those that could afford it, anyway) were big on perfume. There weren't no deodorants, and hygeine wasn't as good, people often had bad teeth and breath, so perfume and incense was very heavily used.
Peasants had to put up with just being stinky. Imagine a tiny house, about the size of your front room, crammed with a married couple, an aging relative and half a dozen children... all sleeping and eating in the same tiny room after spending a hot June day toiling in the fields, hauling rocks from the fields, trudging through cow muck, getting sweaty; all except the second eldest son, who works at the tanners and has therefore spent the day processing cat piss. Oh, and the teenage girl children are all wearing chastity belts... which limit their access to being able to wash downstairs. And the youngest is still in nappies (which are reusable, not disposable in these days). And the privy outside needs redigging.
For real authenticness, once hygeine gets into the game, perfume should be an expensive item (and therefore only accessible to nobles) and miasma should occur around any dwarf who refrains from washing away the multiple layers of blood and vomit he is caked in.