This is a pair of visual multiple star systems:

When you look up and see the stars, in most cases, you’re actually looking at multiple star systems. In many cases, the stars that make up a multiple star system are so close together that methods other than looking at them need to be used to make out the system’s individual members. The pair of multiple stars you see in this image are easy to see in this image.

The blue stars at the top-right of the image are a pair of orbiting stars known as HIP 94039 at a distance of about 488 light years from us.

The white stars near the bottom-left of the image are actually made up of 3 stars, but you can easily see two of them here. The stars are known as HD 178911 and a binary pair orbit the 3rd star in a 1,300-day orbit. The star system is about 160 light years from us. In 2001, an exoplanet was discovered around the third member of the star system.

The pair just appear to be close to each other due to how they are aligned along our line of sight. The blue stars are 488 light years from us and the white ones are 160 light years from us.

I took the image using the Slooh.com Canary 2 Telescope and researched the stars using data from TheSkyX planetarium software.