 This visualization explores the Orion Nebula using both visible and infrared light. The sequence begins with a wide field view of the sky, showing the plane of our Milky Way galaxy, then zooms down into the scale of the Orion Nebula. The visible light observations from the Hubble Space Telescope and the infrared light observations from the Spitzer Space Telescope are compared, first in two-dimensional images and then in three-dimensional models. As the camera flies into the star-forming region, the sequence cross-fades back and forth between the visible and infrared views. This color composite mosaic of the central part of the Orion Nebula is based on 81 images from the European Southern Observatory very large telescope in Chile. The famous trapezium star appears near the center, amid the trapezium cluster, the very crowded home of more than a thousand young stars. Researchers will train the James Webb Space Telescope on this region to study phenomena associated with the formation of stars and planets.