 Direct measurements, triangulation, and parallax took us across Earth, the Solar System, and nearby stars. We added expansion parallax for planetary nabula and a number of powerful standard candles that were verified against stars that could be measured via parallax. This took us all the way across the Milky Way and into our local supercluster, Virgo. Here, C-Feed variables confirmed the accuracy of Type 1A supernova as an excellent standard candle. This is critical because even with the Hubble Space Telescope, we can't see C-Feed stars much further than 100 million light-years. But we can see Type 1A supernova out to 8 billion light-years. In addition, C-Feeds in Type 1As have given us redshift as a way to tell distance. This wrong is only limited by what is visible, and we'll see in later segments we can see out to around 13 billion light-years.