The bar chart compares the sales of various products in the UK over four seasons in 2015.
What stands out from the graph is that households in the UK spent the most on clothing no matter which season it was. Also, towards the end of the year, people started to purchase electrical appliances and children’s toys more.
Looking first at the data of the clothing and household, the figure for clothing was chronicled at exactly 100000, which was 20000 higher than that of the household’s peak at the outset. The summer period witnessed a slight drop of the sales in clothing and household respectively to 80000 and 70000 before both declining by 10000 with the clothing’s figure reaching its trough in the next season. In the concluding period, while the sales in clothing was on an increase to its zenith at 110000, the opposite trend was seen in the sales in households, hitting the bottom at 50000.
Turning to the 3 remainders, almost all the garden’s figures were around 40000, doubling the only exception of its nadir in winter. Meanwhile, given that the sales in children’s toy, recorded at 30000, halved that of electrical equipment initially, both of these statistics were on the decline by 10000 to their troughs. After the recovery of electrical equipment’s figure by the factor of 2 and that of children’s toy to 60000 in autumn, these both escalated to their climaxes by 10000 in the last season in the year of 2015
