Apparently I have a reputation of being an expert in Sactified Vidette wormholes.
I have been commissioned to create an atlas of the wormholes there, for all different regions in the cluster.
Each region's typical night sky appears in a distorted way through the wormhole, on the other side, allowing pilots to see where it is leading to before actually traversing it. While the image is heavily distorted, our cluster's nebulae can still be made out distinctively. Even the direction from which a nebula is viewed alters its aspect. Take for example the Kor-Azor nebula as seen from Khanid:
It has a "coeur d'azure" or azure heart, surrounded by a brownish shell. The blue-sky colored center of the nebula is clearly visible from the Kor-Azor region where it dominates the celestial dome, and some say House Kor-Azor got its name from it. But when you look at the same nebula from Genesis, it looks more like a cup or cauldron:


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