The Story
Why it exists.
Only Human is exactly what the name promises. Where most fragrances build worlds to escape into, this one starts from the ground up, vanilla as fact, not fantasy. Noyz, the genderless Los Angeles house that debuted in 2024, has built its identity on refusing the usual perfume marketing theater. Only Human is their answer to the question nobody asked but everyone needed: what if vanilla actually smelled like vanilla, and not like a candle? Jérôme Epinette constructed this around a central tension, the warmth people crave about vanilla, held at arm's length by the clean, almost mineral cool of ambroxan. The result is intimate without performing intimacy. That's the brand's whole philosophy in a bottle.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sun
Rhye
The Beginning
Only Human is exactly what the name promises. Where most fragrances build worlds to escape into, this one starts from the ground up, vanilla as fact, not fantasy. Noyz, the genderless Los Angeles house that debuted in 2024, has built its identity on refusing the usual perfume marketing theater. Only Human is their answer to the question nobody asked but everyone needed: what if vanilla actually smelled like vanilla, and not like a candle? Jérôme Epinette constructed this around a central tension, the warmth people crave about vanilla, held at arm's length by the clean, almost mineral cool of ambroxan. The result is intimate without performing intimacy. That's the brand's whole philosophy in a bottle.
The ambroxan is the quiet decision here. It takes vanilla out of the dessert column and into something that reads as warm without sweetness overload, clean, skin-like, slightly marine in the way it catches light. Combined with Moroccan cedar, you get a base that anchors the whole thing without heaviness. The bamboo and water lily heart is the counter-move: an aquatic cool that keeps the opening from going too sweet and prevents the base from settling into something predictable. It's the composition's way of saying this isn't your grandmother's vanilla. It's vanilla at body temperature.
The Evolution
The opening arrives with brief intention, bergamot's citrus brightness softened immediately by pink pepper's clean spice. The sparkle lasts maybe thirty minutes. Then the handoff: bamboo and water lily take over, and the fragrance cools down without going aquatic. It just becomes quiet. The ambroxan starts asserting itself in the background around the two-hour mark, pulling the vanilla away from sweetness and toward warmth. By hour four, you're wearing Moroccan cedar and vanilla in a ratio that smells like skin warmed by afternoon light. The drydown holds close, arm's length, not across the room. It stays there for another three to four hours. What you're left with at the end is a faint trace, almost imperceptible unless you're looking for it. That's the point.
Cultural Impact
Only Human arrives in a crowded vanilla landscape with a specific point of view: warm, close, honest. The ambroxan backbone and bamboo heart set it apart from sweeter competitors, appealing to wearers burned by vanilla overload who want something believable rather than performative. The moderate sillage signals a fragrance built for proximity, not presence, worn for yourself, not the room.
The House
United States · Est. 2024
Noyz is a genderless fragrance house rooted in Los Angeles, dedicated to crafting expressive, long-lasting scents that reject traditional perfume marketing conventions. Rather than wrapping products in fantasy narratives, the brand presents fragrance as an honest extension of personal identity. Each release carries an unconventional name and a corresponding mood, inviting wearers to engage with scent on their own terms.
If this were a song
Community picks
The scent sits in the hour between dusk and dark, when you're alone and don't need to perform. Warm, intimate, unhurried. Music that matches has the same quality: unhurried warmth, restraint that reads as confidence, nothing polished to a shine.
Sun
Rhye



















