Threadly fun astronomy fact:
The Pleiades are one of the most prominent winter night sky objects. They're a cluster of bright blue stars, gravitationally bound together, and with the naked eye you can see 5 to 6 of them, on the shoulder of the bull in the constellation of Taurus.
Their classical name "the seven sisters" seems counterintuitive, considering you can only see at most 6, but two of the stars - Pleione and Atlas, used to be further apart in ancient times, before written human history, causing the story of the seven sisters to spread orally throughout the entire world, including myths on where the "lost pleiad" went or what happened to her, when in reality the two stars merged as one from our PoV due to their motion through our galaxy over thousands of years. With binoculars you can see the 9 brightest named stars, and more, including: Pleione, Atlas, Alcyone, Elektra, Maia, Merope, Caelano, Taygeta and Asterope! With a telescope or long exposure astrophotography you can see a ton more stars and blue nebulosity.
Also in the Constellation of Taurus lies another cluster - the Hyades. They make up the V-shape of the head of the bull. They are the closest star cluster to our solar system.
The ecliptic (the path of the planets, moon and sun in the sky from our PoV) passes right in between the Hyades and the Pleiades, causing that area to be named the "Golden Gate" of the ecliptic.