Sorry for the long reply, but I wanted to share my novice poodle enthusiast opinion on things until someone more experienced chimes in.
For starters, check out this great thread by Rose n Poos about finding a breeder and buying a puppy.
Breeders Listed By Location Thread
Also, this thread by fjm discusses screening breeders.
Buying a puppy safely- the basics
From what I've learned on this forum and what I saw on a quick search of what I think is their website, I personally would go with a different breeder.
1) Lack of titles on their dogs: Conformation showing is one way breeders prove their poodle is what a poodle is supposed to be. They do mention showing and have a few pictures of dogs in the ring, but none of their dogs have a championship or grand championship tied to their name that I could see.
2) Lack of health testing: This is different from genetic testing. The health testing I am talking about is the patella, eyes, etc. that @Peggmentioned earlier. When I looked up Babydog on OFA (the database the vast majority of breeders use) I only came up with 2 dogs, neither of which were poodles. Now this could simply be a lack of the breeder submitting the test results to the database, but it would make me uncomfortable since they don't mention doing this kind of testing on their website either. Health testing is a way to ensure as best as possible that future generations can live long healthy lives free of preventable diseases.
3) No information on puppy-raising practices: I would not feel confident with a breeder who does not mention using Puppy Culture, Rule of 7s, Avidog, or another practice. These are designed to start socialization from an early age and help the puppies have the best chance of being happy pets that can easily adapt to the changes life brings.
4) No temperament testing: The website mentions nothing about temperament testing and the contact page has a question that sounds like it implies buyer picks their puppy. Temperament of a puppy plays a much bigger role in how a puppy fits into a family than color or even sex. A buyer would have a hard time picking up on the quirks of each puppy and the ways each puppy interacts with the world (especially if all the buyer saw was a couple of posed pictures [I don't know what the breeder actually puts out to the public]). Great breeders will temperament test their puppies (often using the Volhard test) to determine what sort of personality each puppy has and thus what sort of family each puppy would do best with. Breeders usually take color and sex into account when deciding which family takes which puppy, but sometimes the right puppy is the "wrong" color. You will find though, that there are many happy poodle owners on this forum who got the "wrong" color puppy and are so happy with the poodle they ended up with.
This is what I noticed. I did not do extensive research or look at the Facebook page which is probably more up to date than the website. Also, the breeder seems to be doing some things right, like attempting to show their dogs and doing the genetic testing (can determine if dog is a carrier for certain diseases). I wouldn't say I have a great eye for conformation, but I thought at least three of their dogs (Garnet [dog], Cedar [dog], and Sunny [bitch]) were really long in the body or short on leg. I have read in other posts that this is a problem in minis and/or toys and should not be bred. I'll drop the link to the website here in case someone else wants to chime in on it. Finally, is anyone else concerned that they are breeding 3 different sizes of poodles and market their standards as moyen/Klein? It seems like a marketing ginmic to me unless they are from European lines (but we have no way of knowing this as far as I can tell).
Babydog Poodles