
One by one, in an infinitely slow procession, the dancers came out from the darkness. They were dressed in a bright colored stuff overlaid with gold-leaf, wound tightly round the body under the armpits, half covering the breast and reaching to the hips. A sash of some pale color, chiefly pink or yellow, tied a knot above this, hung down on the right side. Under the brocade corsage, a long tight black sarong with rather shiny surface reached to and covered the feet. It was very narrow, and folded so that it formed a slanting line from the right hip to the left ankle, allowing a sumptuous train of dark purple, green, flame, or orange, all covered with gold-leaf, to sweep through and fall between the legs behind.

Generally, the rejang is danced in several files, the dancers linked each to each by sashes, which they hold in their left hand, while the right arm, sometimes with, sometimes without fan, keeps up a slow undulation, contracting or expanding, but never raising above shoulder-level.
The movement of rejang appears very simple, but is really bafflingly complicated an as impossible to analyze in words as the running of a hound or the swimming of a fish, for all parts of the movement are so involved in one another that there is no moment when any could actually be said begin or end.
The best rejang dance can be seen in the village of Batuan, Tenganan, Bungaya and Asak