In recent years, the effects of light pollution have become significant, and the need for image reproduction of a faithful and preferred starry sky has increased. Previous studies have analyzed the relationships between the luminance, size, and color temperature of stars and the fidelity and nature of their appearance, as well as color perception. This study examines the depth perception of stars. We consider starry sky images as a set of “small-field light sources” that can be viewed as point light sources with minimal viewing angles. Our goal was to experimentally elucidate the cues for depth perception. In our experiments, observers viewed two points of different sizes, luminances, and color temperatures and selected the one perceived to be in front to confirm the relationship between the three depth cues of retinal image; size, light attenuation, and color, and their association with depth perception. Results confirmed that retinal image size and light attenuation were relevant for a small-field light source. Results also suggest that the interaction between retinal image size and light attenuation may be explained by retinal illuminance. However, the effect of color was small, and the point with higher saturation was more likely to be perceived in front, when the hue was close to that of the point.