Creating a taxonomy of interests is expensive and human-effort intensive: not only do we need to identify nodes and interconnect them, in order to use the taxonomy, we must also connect the nodes to relevant entities such as users, pins, and queries. Connecting to entities is challenging because of ambiguities inherent to language but also because individual interests are dynamic and evolve. Here, we offer an alternative approach that begins with bottom-up discovery of $\mu$-topics called pincepts. The discovery process itself connects these $\mu$-topics dynamically with relevant queries, pins, and users at high precision, automatically adapting to shifting interests. Pincepts cover all areas of user interest and automatically adjust to the specificity of user interests and are thus suitable for the creation of various kinds of taxonomies. Human experts associate taxonomy nodes with $\mu$-topics (on average, 3 $\mu$-topics per node), and the $\mu$-topics offer a high-level data layer that allows quick definition, immediate inspection, and easy modification. Even more powerfully, $\mu$-topics allow easy exploration of nearby semantic space, enabling curators to spot and fill gaps. Curators' domain knowledge is heavily leveraged and we thus don't need untrained mechanical Turks, allowing further cost reduction. These $\mu$-topics thus offer a satisfactory "symbolic" stratum over which to define taxonomies. We have successfully applied this technique for very rapidly iterating on and launching the home decor and fashion styles taxonomy for style-based personalization, prominently featured at the top of Pinterest search results, at 94% precision, improving search success rate by 34.8% as well as boosting long clicks and pin saves.