Embrodery itself destroys the font with the sewing.
try to look here:
http://www.embroiderydesigns.com/freeembroideryfonts.aspx
Sportage Tall - site 4
It depends. It depends on how it was digitized and at what size it was digitized for. Not all fonts can be used at the same size. When you have professionally digitized fonts (not all are TTF fonts at that), they have min and max stitching values. You go above or below that, that's when it looks like embroidery itself destroyed the font.
This is one of the reasons why designs so often have to be recreated in embroidery. You might see the one letter of text as just one object, but depending on size and fabric, it might translate to 6 objects in embroidery.
What bothers me the most are those thread jump connectors, especially between the "Y" and the "L". I can understand it from a production standpoint, but I would have tried to use closest join to hide those and would have used a trim between the words. They were just too concerned with production and not enough on final product. Unless they are going to manual cut between all of those letters, some of which I doubt that they could.