If you are going to get an albino of some sort, then definitely avoid using basking light. There have been studies of light damaging albino eyes, along with their lack of melanin in their skin, it's just not a very good idea to use basking light with albinos.
Light is doable, but honestly with leopard geckos being crepuscular / nocturnal-like, you know they don't like light. They avoid it. In the morning you open the blinds and let the sun shine through your window, they hide and go to sleep. So to use basking light, you are really forcing something onto them that they don't like. In order to use light properly, you need to put a lot of hides and fake plants to give them plenty of shades. And while creating shades and hiding spots, you need to make sure they get 90-95 degrees of belly heat. Of course you can also see how this is more difficult at night when you want to turn the light off, as ceramic heat emitter isn't very good at raising floor temperature to the 90-95 degree zone.
I'm not saying light isn't doable, but you are making this harder on yourself by not going with an under tank heating pad, and just supplement it with ceramic heat emitter if you can't achieve 90-95 degrees with just UTH. Your leopard gecko will be less stressed, it'll have a more comfortable environment with proper belly heat, I think it'll be more happy overall. Plus you then won't have to worry about getting an albino.