Blog / Wedding · June 10, 2026

JW Marriott Savannah Wedding in Savannah | Adam and Eleanor

Adam and Eleanor make their bubble exit along the Savannah riverfront outside JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District at the end of their wedding night.

JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District is already one of the most distinctive wedding venues in the city, but Adam and Eleanor managed to make the day feel even more Savannah than that. We started with a first look and private vows at the JW, stepped away for portraits at SCAD Arnold Hall and the Forsyth Park fountain, came back for a riverfront ceremony at MLK Park, and then used the inside of the hotel for some of the most fun creative portraits of the day.

I photograph at the JW often enough to know how flexible it is, and this wedding really showed why. You can have quiet space for a private moment, classic Savannah portraits a short drive away, open river views for the ceremony, and then all kinds of texture inside once the light changes. It gave the whole day range without ever making it feel scattered. I shoot here often, and it still feels like one of those venues I could happily photograph even more.

Getting ready and slowing down for private vows

A getting-ready triptych from Adam and Eleanor's Savannah wedding: the wedding rings, bridesmaids in matching robes, and Eleanor by the suite window at JW Marriott Savannah.

The morning had a lot of energy, but it never tipped into chaos. Eleanor had a bright suite, great window light, and a room full of people who clearly knew how to keep things fun without making everything frantic. That balance always helps. It gives you real reactions instead of the kind of rushed blur that can take over a wedding morning.

A bridal morning triptych from JW Marriott Savannah: Eleanor getting help with her dress and sharing bright, quiet moments before the ceremony.
A wedding morning triptych at JW Marriott Savannah: Adam getting ready on the stairwell, detail of his shoes and cuff, and the groomsmen cheering by the riverfront.

Before we left the hotel, Adam and Eleanor took time for both a first look and private vows. I love when couples do that if it fits their day. It lets them actually be with each other for a minute before the rest of the timeline starts moving. The JW has several corners that work well for this, but the suites and river-facing windows are especially good if you want privacy and flattering light at the same time.

A private-vows diptych at JW Marriott Savannah with Adam and Eleanor holding each other in the blue room and standing by the riverfront windows before the ceremony.
A diptych from the quiet moments before the ceremony: Adam with his mother and Eleanor reading private vows while holding Adam's hand.

Arnold Hall, Forsyth, and a little Savannah history in the middle of the day

What made this one especially personal was that we left the hotel for places that mattered to them. We made a stop at Arnold Hall, then worked in a quick visit to Forsyth Park before heading back for the ceremony. That kind of detour only works when the places mean something real, and here it absolutely did.

A Savannah portrait triptych with Adam and Eleanor on the riverfront at Plant Riverside District, a stop at SCAD Arnold Hall, and portraits at the Forsyth Park fountain.

Forsyth is still one of the best quick portrait moves in Savannah if it matters to the couple and the timeline has room for it. The fountain photographs beautifully, everybody recognizes it immediately, and it gives you that unmistakable sense of place without needing a huge block of time. Arnold Hall added a different layer: quieter, more personal, and rooted in the couple's own Savannah story.

A riverfront ceremony at MLK Park

A wide view of Adam and Eleanor's ceremony at MLK Park beside JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District with the Savannah River behind them.

The ceremony was held at MLK Park beside Plant Riverside District, with the Savannah River behind them and the wedding party framed against that long stretch of waterfront. It felt open in the best way. You had room for guests to settle in, room for the ceremony to breathe, and a backdrop that felt very much like Savannah without trying too hard.

A ceremony triptych from MLK Park at JW Marriott Savannah with Eleanor walking down the aisle, Adam and Eleanor exchanging vows, and a family embrace after the ceremony.

One of the things the JW does well for weddings is let you move between polished hotel space and outdoor riverfront space without losing the thread of the day. Adam and Eleanor's ceremony had that nice in-between feeling: formal enough to feel significant, relaxed enough to still feel like them.

Why I love the inside of the JW for portraits

After the ceremony, we walked not only along the riverfront but back through the hotel itself, and this is where the JW really gets fun for me as a photographer. The chrome dinosaur, the glowing agate panels, the giant purple amethyst pieces, the polished lines of the building itself. It gives you a mix of classic wedding coverage and something a little stranger and more memorable.

Adam and Eleanor silhouetted in front of the glowing orange agate wall inside JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District.
Adam and Eleanor silhouetted in front of the purple amethyst display inside JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District.

Those silhouette frames are some of my favorites from the day. They are simple, graphic, and specific to this venue. If you are getting married here, I would absolutely want to budget a few extra minutes after the ceremony or during sunset to use those interior features well.

Pink and purple light, a packed dance floor, and a riverfront exit

A reception-details triptych from JW Marriott Savannah with guests signing in, the guest portrait station, and Adam and Eleanor cutting dessert from Leopold's Ice Cream.

The reception picked up the same personality the rest of the day had: thoughtful details, a crowd that was genuinely happy to be there, and then a dance floor that got lively fast. The guest portrait setup was a hit, the room looked great, and the dessert moment with Leopold's Ice Cream felt perfectly Savannah.

A first-dance triptych at JW Marriott Savannah with pink and purple reception light, chandelier glow, and Adam and Eleanor on the dance floor.

The light in the ballroom went heavy on purple and pink, which suited the room really well. It gave the first dances a little glamor without tipping into nightclub nonsense, and then once the floor filled up it just looked alive. This was one of those receptions where people committed early and never really backed off.

A party triptych from Adam and Eleanor's reception at JW Marriott Savannah with a dance-floor selfie, family dancing, and friends crowding into the frame.
A closing diptych from JW Marriott Savannah with Adam and Eleanor alone on the dance floor under pink light and their bubble exit by the river.

They closed the night with bubbles down by the river, which is hard to argue with. Good crowd, good energy, Savannah water behind them, and one last excuse to stretch the day out a few extra minutes.

If you are looking for a Savannah wedding photographer for the JW, Plant Riverside, Forsyth, or anywhere nearby, I would love to help. You can start here.

JW Marriott Savannah wedding planning notes

If you are planning a wedding at JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District, here are a few practical notes from this day. Every timeline is different, but these are the kinds of things I would talk through with a couple before we build one.

Is JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District a good wedding venue for photos?

Yes. It works especially well if you want variety without spending the whole day in transit. The suites are strong for getting ready, the riverfront gives you clean ceremony and portrait space, and the interior mineral displays and lobby features make it easy to create something more distinctive once the sun gets lower.

Can you do a first look and private vows at the JW before the ceremony?

Absolutely, and I think it works especially well here. There are enough quiet spaces inside the hotel to give those moments privacy, and doing that earlier can free up the ceremony and reception timeline in a really helpful way.

Is Forsyth Park too far away for wedding portraits if you are getting married at the JW?

No, not if it matters to you and the schedule is built around it. Forsyth is a very doable portrait stop from Plant Riverside District. The key is deciding ahead of time that it is important and giving it real time instead of trying to squeeze it into a day that is already overfull.

What are the best indoor photo spots at JW Marriott Savannah?

The river-facing windows, the blue-toned gallery spaces, the chrome dinosaur area, and the agate and amethyst displays are all excellent. They each give you a different kind of frame, which is part of why this venue stays interesting even if I photograph here more than once.

What does a ceremony at MLK Park look like for a JW wedding?

It gives you an open waterfront backdrop and a little more air than some tightly enclosed ceremony setups. For couples who want Savannah river views as part of the day, it is a strong option and it keeps the ceremony visually connected to Plant Riverside District.

Who photographed Adam and Eleanor's JW Marriott Savannah wedding?

This wedding was photographed by Bud Johnson Photography, a Savannah wedding photographer serving JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District, Forsyth Park, and wedding venues throughout Savannah and the Lowcountry.

Vendor Credits

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