okay, I'm confused by this question a little
the thing you have to get your head around is
DPI when printing (75dpi might be okay for a large canvas but for a smaller photo you need a higher DPI (250-300dpi maybe) because you'll see the item close up.
PPI when displaying on screen depends upon how many pixels there are your monitor of a certain size.
and ultimately it's down to resolution.
a recent example for me:
An image was supplied to me at 1800 pixels by 1200 pixels
so printing at 300DPI that gives me a lovely 6" x 4" image.
if I printed it out at 10" x 6" it would be around 200dpi (give or take)
still okay but not as highly detailed. But if it's being viewed with less scrutiny, then you can get away with it. The smaller the print the more people will look up close imho
FlickR take an image of a certain size and then reduce it I think
they don't take one and the blow it up, somehow retaining it's quality.
Happy to be wrong here btw.
but if you can, always start with the largest image size available, and work from there.
Too much detail is fine as that can be just lost in the printing process as the hardware & software scales it to the media size.
Too little detail and it isn't recovered, as much as interpolated so a single pixel is made to cover a larger range, or the computer takes two pixels, spaces them apart and then guesses as best it can would might be between them
remember, and people will disagree with me on this...but DPI is NOT an image size. it's a ratio. to give it any meaning you need
for example if you say you're travelling at 60 mph and you want to get there in an hour....fine...but it means nothing until you know your distance travelled.
here are some examples from the t'interweb
I havent' read them in detail but I think they cover the same thing
http://www.geniusprinting.com.au/howbig.php
http://www.photobookgirl.com/blog/w...n-or-dpi-for-photos-when-making-a-photo-book/