Your moving picture shows significantly more luster, but it still has the wear of a mid-VF. That's really weird..... but I like it. It does also clearly have more wear than the 1811.
Killer coin. I saw a VF25 like this at a dealer's table once. Luster and color, but a PCGS VF25. Was a 1830's date and he was asking $400. He knew what he had, but still overpriced. Now.... a 1813 with that luster and color? $400 would be high, but not laughable.
I said 30, but I'm fine with 25. The "something extra" this coin brings to the table far outweighs the difference between those grades.
Great coin!!! I've been learning about grading a lot from books recently. How does this coin have such strong luster in conjunction with that level of wear on both sides? Dedicated rubbing on the devices?
It’s unusual for it to be that strong at this grade level though bust halves tend to have luster in much lower grades than other series. My guess would be some combination of a weak strike, a strong rim that protected the surfaces and very careful/fortuitous preservation of the coin over the years, but I’m not an expert in these.
I think the high upset rim (due to use of the Castaing machine) and the high relief devices (stars/letters) near the rim protect the luster on the surfaces at the outside. (pretty much what CircCam said)