Droog worked with well known designers such as Marcel Wanders, Hella Jongerius, Tejo Remy, Richard Hutten, Ed Annink, Jurgen Bey and Joris Laarman.
Gijs Bakker and Renny Ramakers expanded Droog in the Netherlands and abroad in the next decades, with a presentation every year at the Salone del Mobile in Milan.
Dry Tech was Droog's first experimental project, in collaboration with Delft University of Technology, with one of the results being the Knotted chair by Marcel Wanders.
From 2004 to 2007, under the title Simply Droog, retrospectives took place in the Haus der Kunst in Munich, the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, Museo Oscar Niemeyer in Curitiba (Brazil) and the Museum of Arts & Design in New York.
Other traveling exhibitions included: Do Create (Tokyo, London, New York, Rotterdam, 2000) a presentation of interior designs that turned into something new by an action ('do'); Go Slow (Milan, New York, Rotterdam, London, Tokyo, 2004), a café setting celebrating the luxury of slowness, attention and care; A Human Touch (Shanghai, Jakarta, New Zealand, Melbourne and Sydney 2006) with products of the Droog collection that could be touched by visitors, and Material Matters (Eindhoven, Milan, Shenzhen, 2014), which presented speculative strategies on how to deal with material scarcity.
In collaboration with local partners and experts, design teams traveled to various places in the world, from New York, China, Moscow, Dubai, Mumbai, Belgium to the far north of Canada.
Droog is host to varying exhibitions, such as The Design Loket and Space is the Place by Mieke Gerritzen in 2019 and Onward & Upward Archived 2021-02-01 at the Wayback Machine by Liselore Frowijn and Renny Ramakers in 2020.