I'll hazard a guess you may not have heard of the constellation of Volans, it's a small constellation in the southern hemisphere not too far from the Large Magellanic Cloud.
Alpha Volantis, a binary system 125 light years from Earth, and while we know the main star is an A type (white star), some of the chemical characteristics for calcium and hydrogen suggest slightly different sizes, making the star system an interest for study.
Beta Volantis is 107 light years from Earth, and a K2III spectral type, making it an orange giant moving towards the end of it's life having burnt it's core hydrogen. It's also one of the brightest stars in Volans, at Mag 3.7 making it clearly visible with the naked eye.
Epsilon Volantis is a quadruple system of B and A type stars, giving the system a blue-ish Hugh. The star represents the connection of the wings to the flying fish and is 640 light years from us.
Zeta Volantis make up one of the upper wing stars, a G9III type star, similar to Beta in that it's a star now expanding after it's main sequence has completed and as it does, the surface area of the star expands reducing the temperature and changing the colour, it will continue to head towards Orange then Red.
Gamma Volantis is also an interesting binary, Gamma 1 is similar to Beta and Zeta in that it's an aging star expanding, currently K type, however it's companion is a F0V type star, meaning the White/Yellow star is still in it's main sequence just as our Sun is. Both stars show a high proper motion, meaning these stars are moving faster and in a different orbit around the galaxy in comparison to our own suns.
Finally, Delta Volantis is a very luminous F type star (white/yellow) over 738 light years from us. There is confusion to the evolutionary status of this star, with many charts placing it towards the end of its life at a mere 50 million years old, while others suggesting it's smaller and has more time to go. Being a star set in the Southern sky, it may not have attracted the kind of attention similar type stars in the northern hemisphere get.
NGC 2397, a beautiful flocculant spiral galaxy 69 million light years from Earth.
NGC 2438 - Open cluster of stars
NGC 2434, an elliptical galaxy almost 70 million light years from Earth.